Christian Freksa, Thomas Barkowsky, Holger Schultheis
Summer 2007
lecture: Mon 08:30 - 10:00 Cartesium Rotunde
tutorials:
Mon 10:15 - 11:00 Cartesium Rotunde
Mon 11:15 - 12:00 Cartesium Rotunde
Wed 08:15 - 09:00 Cartesium Rotunde
Wed 09:15 - 10:00 Cartesium Rotunde
4 SWS (ECTS: 6)
course language: English / German
The technical discussions ("Fachgespräche") as well as the oral exams ("Modulprüfungen") in Cognitive Systems I will be on Monday, 23 July 2007 (and on Monday, 01 October 2007, for repeaters). To take an oral exam or to participate in a technical discussion, please register by 06 July 2007 (or by 14 September 2007, for repeaters) by sending an email to cosy@informatik.uni-bremen.de. If you register for a technical discussion, the email should list the names of all participants of the group (one mail per group is sufficient). Please note that the successful participation in the tutorials is a precondition for registering for a technical discussion.
Tutorial 1 (H. Schultheis): Wed 08:15-09:00
Tutorial 2 (H. Schultheis): Wed 09:15-10:00
Tutorial 3 (T. Barkowsky): Mon 10:15-11:00
Tutorial 4 (T. Barkowsky): Mon 11:15-12:00
To receive credit for this course you have to work on five written / programming exercises (see return dates below). Please send your solutions to cosy-exercises@informatik.uni-bremen.de with the subject of the mail starting with "CoSy 1 / Tutorial <n>" (numbers of tutorials see above). The mail should contain a written documentation as .pdf, .rtf, or .doc file as well as the source code of your implementation. This work is to be done in groups of 3-5 students. In the five exercises you have to reach an average grade of at least 60%. In the tutorial, each group has to present their solutions in an appropriate way (slide presentation, handout).
At the end of the semester we will have a technical discussion of 20-30 minutes with every group to check whether the marks achieved in each working group are homogeneously applicable to all candidates of the group and to decide on individual marks.
In this course you will collaboratively work on the exercises. However, collaboration is to be sharply distinguished from cheating. All forms of cheating (including plagiarism) are strictly forbidden. If you are caught cheating, this may result in an automatic failure in the course.
Return dates for the exercises:
No. 1: 13 May 2007; No. 2: 03 June 2007; No. 3: 17 June 2007; No. 4: 01 July 2007; No. 5: 15 July 2007
What makes a good solution? .ppt .pdf
lecture 1 (23 April) .ppt .pdf
lecture 2 (30 April) .ppt .pdf
lecture 10 (02 July) .ppt .pdf
lecture 11 (09 July) .ppt .pdf
lecture 12 (16 July) .ppt .pdf
Anderson, J. R. (2000). Cognitive psychology and its implications (5th ed.). New York: Worth Publishers.
Palmer, S. E. (1999). Vision science - Photons to phenomenology. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
Gleitman, L. R., & Liberman, M. (Eds.) (1995). An Invitation to Cognitive Science - Vol. 1: Language (2nd ed.). Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
Kosslyn, S. M., & Osherson, D. N. (Eds.) (1995). An Invitation to Cognitive Science - Vol. 2: Visual Cognition (2nd ed.). Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
Smith, E. E., & Osherson, D. N. (Eds.) (1995). An Invitation to Cognitive Science - Vol. 3: Thinking (2nd ed.). Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
Scarborough, D., & Sternberg, S. (Eds.) (1998). An Invitation to Cognitive Science - Vol. 4: Methods, models, and conceptual issues (2nd ed.). Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
| Thomas Barkowsky / 27 April 2007 |