Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Engineering Commons

Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Wright State University

2013

Discipline
Keyword
Publication
Publication Type

Articles 31 - 60 of 158

Full-Text Articles in Engineering

Cs 7840: Soft Computing, John C. Gallagher Jul 2013

Cs 7840: Soft Computing, John C. Gallagher

Computer Science & Engineering Syllabi

This course explores soft computation from historical, theoretical, and application viewpoints. Soft computing methods to be considered include evolutionary computation, neural computation, fuzzy set theory, and approximate reasoning. Applications to problems in optimization, control, and classification will be presented.


Cs 7700: Advanced Database Systems, Soon M. Chung Jul 2013

Cs 7700: Advanced Database Systems, Soon M. Chung

Computer Science & Engineering Syllabi

Introduction of DB design concepts and operating principles of database systems.


Cs 1161: Introduction To Computer Programming Ii, Vanessa Starkey Jul 2013

Cs 1161: Introduction To Computer Programming Ii, Vanessa Starkey

Computer Science & Engineering Syllabi

Introduction to advanced programming concepts and techniques. Emphasis is on object-oriented programming and graphical user interfaces. Integrated lecture/lab.


Cs 1181: Computer Science Ii, Dan C. Wlodarski Jul 2013

Cs 1181: Computer Science Ii, Dan C. Wlodarski

Computer Science & Engineering Syllabi

This is the second course in a two-semester sequence introducing fundamental concepts and techniques for computer science and engineering. The course focuses on problem analysis, advanced programming concepts using JAVA and fundamental data structures. Students learn to analyze problems and evaluate potential solutions with respect to choice of data structures and computational efficiency. Student are exposed to the underlying implementation of basic data structures available in JAVA libraries and develop the skilled needs to extend existing data structures and design new data structures to solve increasingly complex problems. This is an integrated writing course.


Cs 3100: Data Structures And Algorithms, Erik Marlow Buck Jul 2013

Cs 3100: Data Structures And Algorithms, Erik Marlow Buck

Computer Science & Engineering Syllabi

Student learning outcomes include:

  • Analyze basic algorithms for space and time complexity
  • Design abstract data types appropriate for a given problem
  • Implement data structures in an efficient manner
  • Design and Implement non-graphical user-interfaces
  • Select and implement appropriate data structures for a given problem
  • Design algorithms to solve specific problems


Cs 4000: Social Implications Of Computing, Leo Finkelstein Jul 2013

Cs 4000: Social Implications Of Computing, Leo Finkelstein

Computer Science & Engineering Syllabi

CS 4000 is a communication skills course using as its subject matter current salient issues associated with the social implications of computing. IN addition to the course text, you will need to use certain reading materials in the library and elsewhere, and you will be responsible for using concepts and theories provided in class lectures and discussions.


Cs 3180/5180: Comparative Languages, Krishnaprasad Thirunarayan Jul 2013

Cs 3180/5180: Comparative Languages, Krishnaprasad Thirunarayan

Computer Science & Engineering Syllabi

This course will introduce fundamental concepts and paradigms underlying the design of modern programming languages. For concreteness, we study the details of an object-oriented language (e.g. Java, C#, C++), a functional language (e.g. Scheme), and get introduced to multiparadigm languages (e.g. Python, Scala). The overall goal is to enable comparison and evaluation of existing languages. The programming assignments will largely be coded in Java and in Racket (formerly, Scheme) and optionally in Python or Scala.


Ceg 4422/6422-01: Secure Computing Practices, Bin Wang Jul 2013

Ceg 4422/6422-01: Secure Computing Practices, Bin Wang

Computer Science & Engineering Syllabi

No abstract provided.


Towards An Efficient Algorithm To Reason Over Description Logics Extended With Nominal Schemas, David Carral, Cong Wang, Pascal Hitzler Jul 2013

Towards An Efficient Algorithm To Reason Over Description Logics Extended With Nominal Schemas, David Carral, Cong Wang, Pascal Hitzler

Computer Science and Engineering Faculty Publications

Extending description logics with so-called nominal schemas has been shown to be a major step towards integrating description logics with rules paradigms. However, establishing efficient algorithms for reasoning with nominal schemas has so far been a challenge. In this paper, we present an algorithm to reason with the description logic fragment ELROVn, a fragment that extends EL++ with nominal schemas. We also report on an implementation and experimental evaluation of the algorithm, which shows that our approach is indeed rather efficient.


Understanding Common Perceptions From Online Social Media, Derek Doran, Swapna S. Gokhale, Aldo Dagnino Jun 2013

Understanding Common Perceptions From Online Social Media, Derek Doran, Swapna S. Gokhale, Aldo Dagnino

Computer Science and Engineering Faculty Publications

Modern society habitually uses online social media services to publicly share observations, thoughts, opinions, and beliefs at any time and from any location. These geotagged social media posts may provide aggregate insights into people's perceptions on a bad range of topics across a given geographical area beyond what is currently possible through services such as Yelp and Foursquare. This paper develops probabilistic language models to investigate whether collective, topic-based perceptions within a geographical area can be extracted from the content of geotagged Twitter posts. The capability of the methodology is illustrated using tweets from three areas of different sizes. An …


Heterogeneous Relaxation Dynamics In Amorphous Materials Under Cyclic Loading, Nikolai V. Priezjev May 2013

Heterogeneous Relaxation Dynamics In Amorphous Materials Under Cyclic Loading, Nikolai V. Priezjev

Mechanical and Materials Engineering Faculty Publications

Molecular dynamics simulations are performed to investigate heterogeneous dynamics in amorphous glassy materials under oscillatory shear strain. We consider three-dimensional binary Lennard-Jones mixture well below the glass transition temperature. The structural relaxation and dynamical heterogeneity are quantified by means of the self-overlap order parameter and the dynamic susceptibility. We found that at sufficiently small strain amplitudes, the mean square displacement exhibits a broad subdiffusive plateau and the system undergoes nearly reversible deformation over about 104 cycles. Upon increasing strain amplitude, the transition to the diffusive regime occurs at shorter time intervals and the relaxation process involves intermittent bursts of large …


An Ontology Design Pattern For Cartographic Map Scaling, David Carral, Simon Scheider, Krzysztof Janowicz, Charles Vardeman Ii, Adila A. Krisnadhi, Pascal Hitzler May 2013

An Ontology Design Pattern For Cartographic Map Scaling, David Carral, Simon Scheider, Krzysztof Janowicz, Charles Vardeman Ii, Adila A. Krisnadhi, Pascal Hitzler

Computer Science and Engineering Faculty Publications

The concepts of scale is at the core of cartographic abstraction and mapping. It defines which geographic phenomena should be displayed, which type of geometry and map symbol to use, which measures can be taken, as well as the degree to which features need to be exaggerated or spatially displaced. In this work, we present an ontology design pattern for map scaling using the Web Ontology Language (OWL) within a particular extension of the OWL RL profile. We explain how it can be used to describe scaling applications, to reason over scale levels, and geometric representations. We propose an axiomatization …


The Role Of String Similarity Metrics In Ontology Alignment, Michelle Cheatham, Pascal Hitzler May 2013

The Role Of String Similarity Metrics In Ontology Alignment, Michelle Cheatham, Pascal Hitzler

Computer Science and Engineering Faculty Publications

Tim Berners-Lee originally envisioned a much different world wide web than the one we have today - one that computers as well as humans could search for the information they need [3]. There are currently a wide variety of research efforts towards achieving this goal, one of which is ontology alignment.


Biomarkers Of Fatigue: Metabolomics Profiles Predictive Of Cognitive Performance, Nicholas J. Delraso, Deirdre A. Mahle, John J. Schlager, Donald L. Harville, Scott R. Chaiken, Danelle K. Roddy, Mari Chamberlain, Paul E. Anderson, Nicholas V. Reo, Michael L. Raymer, Isaie Sibomana May 2013

Biomarkers Of Fatigue: Metabolomics Profiles Predictive Of Cognitive Performance, Nicholas J. Delraso, Deirdre A. Mahle, John J. Schlager, Donald L. Harville, Scott R. Chaiken, Danelle K. Roddy, Mari Chamberlain, Paul E. Anderson, Nicholas V. Reo, Michael L. Raymer, Isaie Sibomana

Computer Science and Engineering Faculty Publications

Cognitive performance and fatigue are well known to be inversely related. Continuous and sustained actions in operational environments typically lead to reduced sleep normally required to perform optimally. These operational environments subject the warfighter to intense physical and mental exertion. Because fatigue continues to be an occupational hazard, leading to cognitive defects in performance, there has been a recognized need for real-time detection technologies that minimize fatigue-induced mishaps. I the current study, 23 subjects were subjected to 36h of sleep deprivation and cognitive psychomotor vigilance and automated neuropsychological assessment metric tests were conducted over the last 24 h of sleep …


There's No Money In Linked Data, Prateek Jain, Pascal Hitzler, Krzysztof Janowicz, Chitra Venkatramani May 2013

There's No Money In Linked Data, Prateek Jain, Pascal Hitzler, Krzysztof Janowicz, Chitra Venkatramani

Computer Science and Engineering Faculty Publications

Linked Data (LD) has been an active research area for more than 6 years and many aspects about publishing, retrieving, linking, and cleaning Linked Data have been investigated. There seems to be a broad and general agreement that in principle LD datasets can be very useful for solving a wide variety of problems ranging from practical industrial analytics to highly specific research problems. Having these notions in mind, we started exploring the use of notable LD datasets such as DBpedia, Freebase, Geonames and others for a commercial application. However, it turns out that using these datasets in realistic settings is …


Wright State University Celebration Of Research, Scholarship And Creative Activities Book Of Abstracts Friday, April 12, 2013, Wright State University Office Of Undergraduate Research And Stemm Activities Apr 2013

Wright State University Celebration Of Research, Scholarship And Creative Activities Book Of Abstracts Friday, April 12, 2013, Wright State University Office Of Undergraduate Research And Stemm Activities

Symposium of Student Research, Scholarship, and Creative Activities Materials

The student abstract booklet is a compilation of abstracts from students' oral and poster presentations at Wright State University's second annual Celebration of Research, Scholarship and Creative Activities on April 12, 2013.


Flight Physician - April, 2013, Civil Aviation Medical Association Apr 2013

Flight Physician - April, 2013, Civil Aviation Medical Association

Browse all Civil Aviation Medical Association Newsletters

A sixteen page newsletter of the Civil Aviation Medical Association. The newsletter provided news about civil aviation medicine and information related to the organization.


Reasoning With Inconsistencies In Hybrid Mknf Knowledge Bases, Shasha Huang, Qingguo Li, Pascal Hitzler Apr 2013

Reasoning With Inconsistencies In Hybrid Mknf Knowledge Bases, Shasha Huang, Qingguo Li, Pascal Hitzler

Computer Science and Engineering Faculty Publications

This article is concerned with the handling of inconsistencies occurring in the combination of description logics and rules, especially in hybrid MKNF knowledge bases. More precisely, we present a paraconsistent semantics for hybrid MKNF knowledge bases (called para-MKNF knowledge bases) based on four-valued logic as proposed by Belnap. We also reduce this paraconsistent semantics to the stable model semantics via a linear transformation operator, which shows the relationship between the two semantics and indicates that the data complexity in our paradigm is not higher than that of classical reasoning. Moreover, we provide fixpoint operators to compute paraconsistent MKNF models, each …


Ceg 2170-01: Introduction To C Programming For Engineers, Shaojun Wang Apr 2013

Ceg 2170-01: Introduction To C Programming For Engineers, Shaojun Wang

Computer Science & Engineering Syllabi

Basic engineering problem solving using the C programming language. Topics include loops, selection, input/output, files, functions, arrays, complex variables, pointers, structures, and dynamic memory. Students will learn how to approach solving problems in engineering and science; how to develop algorithms, using advanced techniques such as recursion, searching, s01ting and linked lists, to solve those problems; and how to implement those algorithms in the C language.


Cs 1181-01: Computer Science Ii, Michael Ondrasek Apr 2013

Cs 1181-01: Computer Science Ii, Michael Ondrasek

Computer Science & Engineering Syllabi

This is the second course in a two-semester sequence introducing fundamental concepts and techniques for computer science and engineering. The course focuses on problem analysis, advanced programming concepts using JAVA and fundamental data structures. Students learn to analyze problems and evaluate potential solutions with respect to choice of data structures and computational efficiency. Student are exposed to the underlying implementation of basic data structures available in JAVA libraries and develop the skilled needs to extend existing data structures and design new data structures to solve increasingly complex problems. This is an integrated writing course.


Cs 1180-01: Computer Programming - I, Jay Dejongh Apr 2013

Cs 1180-01: Computer Programming - I, Jay Dejongh

Computer Science & Engineering Syllabi

Basic concepts of programming and programming languages are introduced. Emphasis is on problem solving and object oriented programming. This course provides a general introduction to the fundamentals of computer science and programming. Examples from and applications to a broad range of problems are given. No prior knowledge of programming is assumed. The concepts covered will be applied to the Java programming language. Students must register for both lecture and one laboratory section. 4 credit hours.


Cs 1000-09: Technology And Society, Meg Wiltshire Apr 2013

Cs 1000-09: Technology And Society, Meg Wiltshire

Computer Science & Engineering Syllabi

What impact does technology have on society? As technology plays a greater role in our everyday lives, this becomes an increasingly important issue. The past 30 years have seen unprecedented technological advances, but the benefits obtained are often offset by unforeseen consequences and repercussions, such as privacy concerns, identity theft, and safety. This course will evaluate the consequences of technology on individuals, organizations, and society, identifying the potential benefits and limitations. We will discuss how social, ethical, legal, and philosophical issues have impacted, and will continue to impact, society.


Cs 1180-09: Computer Programming - I, Jay Dejongh Apr 2013

Cs 1180-09: Computer Programming - I, Jay Dejongh

Computer Science & Engineering Syllabi

Basic concepts of programming and programming languages are introduced. Emphasis is on problem solving and object oriented programming. This course provides a general introduction to the fundamentals of computer science and programming. Examples from and applications to a broad range of problems are given. No prior knowledge of programming is assumed. The concepts covered will be applied to the Java programming language. Students must register for both lecture and one laboratory section. 4 credit hours.


Cs/Mth 3260/5260: Numerical Methods For Digital Computers, Ronald F. Taylor Apr 2013

Cs/Mth 3260/5260: Numerical Methods For Digital Computers, Ronald F. Taylor

Computer Science & Engineering Syllabi

Numerical methods for the sciences using modern programming languages. Solution of linear and nonlinear equations. symmetric matrix eigenvalue problems, interpolation, and least squares. Initial value and boundary value problems for representative systems governed by ordinary and partial differential equations are also solved numerically. Three hours lecture.


Cs 7220: Computability And Complexity, Michael L. Raymer Apr 2013

Cs 7220: Computability And Complexity, Michael L. Raymer

Computer Science & Engineering Syllabi

No abstract provided.


Cs 7120: Functional And Logic Programming, Krishnaprasad Thirunarayan Apr 2013

Cs 7120: Functional And Logic Programming, Krishnaprasad Thirunarayan

Computer Science & Engineering Syllabi

This course will discuss important concepts and language features to support (i) functional programming and (ii) logic programming. Specifically: (i) The first half of the course will cover functional programming techniques and constructs such as recursive definitions, higher-order functions, type inference, polymorphism, abstract data types, and modules. The programming exercises will illustrate the utility of list-processing, pattern matching, abstraction of data/control, strong typing, and parametrized modules (fucntors). We will also study the mathematical reasoning (induction) involved in the design of functional programs and for proving properties about functions so defined. The programming assignments will be coded in SML '97 (Standard …


Cs 2800: Web Design Fundamentals, Mohamed B. Ali Apr 2013

Cs 2800: Web Design Fundamentals, Mohamed B. Ali

Computer Science & Engineering Syllabi

HTML is the markup language that every web developer uses in order to structure and present content in the Internet. HTML5 is the standard that is being shaped and developed currently. It extends and improves the last HTML4 standard and takes it to the next level with support multimedia, communication and more. In this course, Students learn the fundamentals of Web design and development. Using various web software (Text editors, Expression Web, browsers and ftp clients). We will use CSS and forms, learn to add multimedia to pages, learn to insert JavaScript code into our web pages to increase interactivity, …


Cs 3100-01/5100-01: Data Structures And Algorithms, Erik Marlow Buck Apr 2013

Cs 3100-01/5100-01: Data Structures And Algorithms, Erik Marlow Buck

Computer Science & Engineering Syllabi

No abstract provided.


Anisotropic Compositional Expansion And Chemical Potential For Amorphous Lithiated Silicon Under Stress Tensor, Valery I. Levitas, Hamed Attariani Apr 2013

Anisotropic Compositional Expansion And Chemical Potential For Amorphous Lithiated Silicon Under Stress Tensor, Valery I. Levitas, Hamed Attariani

Mechanical and Materials Engineering Faculty Publications

Si is a promising anode material for Li-ion batteries, since it absorbs large amounts of Li. However, insertion of Li leads to 334% of volumetric expansion, huge stresses, and fracture; it can be suppressed by utilizing nanoscale anode structures. Continuum approaches to stress relaxation in LixSi, based on plasticity theory, are unrealistic, because the yield strength of LixSi is much higher than the generated stresses. Here, we suggest that stress relaxation is due to anisotropic (tensorial) compositional straining that occurs during insertion-extraction at any deviatoric stresses. Developed theory describes known experimental and atomistic simulation …


Cs 1000-01: Technology And Society, Meg Wiltshire Apr 2013

Cs 1000-01: Technology And Society, Meg Wiltshire

Computer Science & Engineering Syllabi

What impact does technology have on society? As technology plays a greater role in our everyday lives, this becomes and increasingly important issue. The past 30 years have seen unprecedented technological advances, but the benefits obtained are often offset by unforeseen consequences and repercussions, such as privacy concerns, identity theft, and safety. This course will evaluate the consequences of technology on individuals, organizations, and society, identifying the potential benefits and limitations. We will discuss how social, ethical, legal, and philosophical issues have impacted, and will continue to impact, society.