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MIT Subject Listing & Schedule
My Course Selections

3.903[J] Seminar in Polymers and Soft Matter
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Graduate (Fall, Spring) Can be repeated for credit
(Same subject as 10.960[J])
Prereq: None
Units: 2-0-0 [P/D/F]
Remove from schedule Lecture: W3-5 (56-114)
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A series of seminars covering a broad spectrum of topics in polymer science and engineering, featuring both on- and off-campus speakers.
A. Alexander-Katz
No textbook information available

3.C27[J] Computational Imaging: Physics and Algorithms
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Undergrad (Fall)
(Same subject as 2.C27[J], 6.C27[J])
(Subject meets with 2.C67[J], 3.C67[J], 6.C67[J])
Prereq: 18.C06 and (1.00, 1.000, 2.086, 3.019, or 6.100A)
Units: 3-0-9
Remove from schedule Lecture: MW11-12.30 (24-121)
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Explores the contemporary computational understanding of imaging: encoding information about a physical object onto a form of radiation, transferring the radiation through an imaging system, converting it to a digital signal, and computationally decoding and presenting the information to the user. Introduces a unified formulation of computational imaging systems as a three-round "learning spiral": the first two rounds describe the physical and algorithmic parts in two exemplary imaging systems. The third round involves a class project on an imaging system chosen by students. Undergraduate and graduate versions share lectures but have different recitations. Involves optional "clinics" to even out background knowledge of linear algebra, optimization, and computational imaging-related programming best practices for students of diverse disciplinary backgrounds. Students taking graduate version complete additional assignments.
G. Barbastathis
Textbooks (Fall 2024)

12.703 Presenting Scientific Research
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Graduate (Fall)
Prereq: None
Units: 3-0-3
Remove from schedule Meets at WHOI. Lecture: T1-2.30 (54-827)
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Presenting scientific research geared toward a scientific audience. Each student gives one 30-minute talk, one AGU-style 15-minute talk, and one poster presentation. Students present their ongoing research and use the class as a forum to practice for upcoming talks in more formal settings. Abstracts are prepared for each presentation and discussed in class. Students provide comments, questions, encouragement, critiques, etc. on their peers' presentations.
WHOI Faculty
No textbook information available

Total units: 20

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A note on the schedule: Lecture options are shown, not labs or recitations.

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TIMEMon TueWed ThuFri KEY

 3.903

 3.C27

 12.703

7 am




8 am




9 am




10 am




11 am2
2

2
2


12 pm2

2


1 pm
3
3



2 pm
3



3 pm

1
1


4 pm

1
1


5 pm




6 pm




7 pm




8 pm




9 pm