Instructor: Virgil Pavlu E-mail: v.pavlu@northeastern.edu but I strongly prefer Teams chat to email
Lecture: Wed 6pm - 9:10pm Boston Campus, KN 010.
TAs:
Matthew Piekenbrock, piekenbrock.m@northeastern.edu
Anthony Testa, testa.an@northeastern.edu
Campus Office
Hours HS 202 Mon + Thu, 5pm - 6:30pm
Online/Teams Office Hours
TBD
Gradescope: https://www.gradescope.com/courses/780357
http://www.stanford.edu/class/cs229/section/cs229-linalg.pdf
http://www.stanford.edu/class/cs229/section/cs229-prob.pdf
There will be 7-8 assignments (one
per module, roughly every two weeks), including programming ; please
see the syllabus for an exact schedule. Some of the problems
can be difficult, and it will often be helpful to discuss
them with others. Feel free to form study groups. However,
the idea is for everyone to understand the problems and
experience working through the solutions, so you may not simply "give" a solution to another classmate. In
particular, each student must
write up his or her own homework
solutions/code and must
not read or copy the
solutions/code of others. If you work with others on a
problem, you must
note with whom you discussed the
problem at the beginning of your solution write-up.
Late homework policy: Homework is due at the beginning of class on the announced due date. You will be granted one homework extension of 1 week, to be used at your discretion, no questions asked. This policy does not apply to projects. After the first late assignment, unexcused late assignments will be penalized 20% per calendar day late. I normally will not accept assignments after the date on which the following assignment is due or after the solutions have been handed out, whichever comes first. If you will have a valid reason for turning in an assignment late, please see me in advance to obtain full-credit.
Optionally students can work on a project replacing one HW, if they discuss it in advance with the instructor.
All work submitted for credit must be your own.
You may discuss
the homework problems or projects with your classmates,
including approach, plans on paper/board, results, parameters, setup, analysis. You cannot share code.
You must
acknowledge the people with whom you discussed your work,
and you must write up your own solutions. Any written
sources used (apart from the text) must also be
acknowledged; however, you may not consult
any solutions from previous years' assignments whether
they are student or faculty generated.