Computer Science 426: Introduction to Bioinformatics
Spring 2007

Tue, Thu 1:25-2:40 at Upson Hall 109


Announcements



Staff

Office Hours (or by email appointment)

Uri Keich

Upson Hall 4159

Tuesday 3-4 pm

Ravikant Dintyala

Upson Hall 316

Monday, Wednesday 11:15 – 12:15

Tuesday 11:15 – 12:00



Books (on hold in the Engineering Library)


Syllabus

A draft syllabus is contained in the notes of the first class. Deviations are expected but it does give the big picture.

Prerequisites

Nothing written in stone, but the following concepts will be used with minimal or no explanations: trees, algorithms, complexity, basic probability (terms such as distribution and density functions, binomial random variable, expectation). You should also be able to program at least in a scriptable language such as Matlab or Perl.

Final

There will be a final on Friday May 11, 2:00-4:30pm in Hollister 372.

Homework

There will be biweekly homework sets, generally due on Tuesdays. Homework should be handed in class just before it starts on the day it is due.

Late homeworks will not receive credit. (If a genuine emergency situation prevents you from handing in an assignment on time, come talk to me and we can work something out.)

You are allowed to collaborate on the homework to the extent of formulating ideas as a group. However, you must write up the solutions to each problem set completely on your own. You must also list the names of everyone that you discussed the problem set with.

Grade Breakdown

The overall course grade will be determined as follows: 60% based on the final exam and 40% based on the cumulative homework score.

Academic Integrity

You are expected to maintain the utmost level of academic integrity in the course. Any violation of the code of academic integrity will be penalized severely.

You are allowed to collaborate on the homework to the extent of formulating ideas as a group. However, you must write up the solutions to each problem set completely on your own. You must also list the names of everyone that you discussed the problem set with.