CSCE 478/878 (Fall 2008) Oral Presentation Schedule
Note: At the time of your talk, put your presentation on the web or bring it on
a CD or USB key.
You should show up early to put your
presentation on the computer (or email it to me ahead of time).
Doing so before the start of the session as
opposed to right before your talk will speed things up for everyone.
(You may use your own laptop if you wish, but things will go faster if we
use a single machine.)
You are expected to attend as many talks as possible, especially those during
regular class periods.
You should consider your presentation's scheduled time slot final unless you
have a conflict that you absolutely cannot change. This is to prevent
constant modifications of the presentation schedule, which require alterations
to everyone else's schedules.
Unless otherwise noted, each talk will be 13 minutes, plus 2
minutes for questions. Hence a total of 15 minutes is allotted per talk.
However, this is only an approximation! Don't
assume that your talk will start exactly at the time implied by the
given schedule.
- Session 1
12:30–1:20 Monday, December 8
- Jonathan Ray
Netflix Prize
- Seth Hoffert
Self-Organizing Maps for Image Visualization
- Yuji Mo
Item Packing
- Session 2
12:30–1:20 Wednesday, December 10
- Robert Lindquist
Artificial Neural Networks to Classify CC-MS
- Ross Nelson
Intrusion Detection
- Eric Grubaugh
Principal Components Analysis
- Session 3
12:30–1:20 Friday, December 12
- Jesse Hostetler
Genetic Algorithms for the Traveling Salesman Problem
- Timothy Braun and Mark Merrill
Texas Hold-'em
- James Garcia and Derek Weitzel
Ditributed Nearest Neighbor with Map Reduce, Hadoop, and HDFS
- Session 4
3:30–6:00 Tuesday, December 16 (final exam period)
- Shant Karakashian
Hidden Markov Models for Speaker Recognition
(18 minute talk, plus two minutes for questions)
- Michael Gubbels
Bayes Nets in Budgeted Learning
- Jian Hu and Peng Yang
Power Consumption Estimation
- John Garcia
Settlers of Catan
- Jonathan Crosmer
Predicting Human Responses to Sonorities
(18 minute talk, plus two minutes for questions)
- Sarah Riley
Using Metalearning to Create Adaptable Classifiers
(18 minute talk, plus two minutes for questions)
- Aaron Steggs
Active Learning
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Last modified 16 August 2011; please report problems to
sscott.