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Spring 2026
This course explores Natural Language Processing (NLP), examining how computers are trained to understand and process human language. Students will gain a thorough understanding of both core NLP concepts and advanced techniques, including text analysis, language modeling, machine translation, question answering, text generation, conversation modeling, and the latest advancements in large language models.
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Spring 2026
This course focuses on the core principles of RL. Like statistical learning, a central challenge of RL is to generalize learned capabilities to unseen environments. However, RL faces additional challenges such as exploration-exploitation tradeoff, credit assignment, and distribution mismatch between behavior and target policies. Throughout the course, we will delve into various solutions to these challenges and provide theoretical justifications.
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Fall 2025
This course is designed to develop cross-competency in the technical, analytical, and professional capabilities necessary for the emerging field of Cyber-Physical Systems (CPS). It provides convergence learning activities based around the applications, technologies, and system designs of CPS as well as exploring the ethical, social, and policy dimensions of CPS work. The course also emphasizes the importance of communication as a necessary skill.
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Spring 2026
A graduate student returning from Curricular Practical Training can use this course to claim one credit hour of academic credit after successfully reporting, orally and in writing, a summary of the CPT experience to his/her academic advisor.
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Spring 2026
Detailed study of graduate course material on an independent basis under the guidance of a faculty member.
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3.65
Fall 2025
Analyzes network topologies; backbone design; performance and queuing theory; data-grams and virtual circuits; technology issues; layered architectures; standards; survey of commercial networks, local area networks, and contention-based communication protocols; encryption; and security. Course equivalent to ECE 7457. Prerequisite: CS 6456 or instructor permission.
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Spring 2026
Detailed study of graduate course material on an independent basis under the guidance of a faculty member.
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Spring 2026
Formal record of student commitment to project research for the Master of Computer Science degree under the guidance of a faculty advisor.
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Spring 2026
For master's students who are teaching assistants.
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Spring 2026
Formal record of student commitment to thesis research for the Master of Science degree under the guidance of a faculty advisor. May be repeated as necessary.
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