CSCI 385 - Final Project

Assigned October 24th


Overview

The purpose of this project, worth 25% of your final grade, is to improve your research, writing and communication skills as well as give you an opportunity to explore in-depth a particular domain with your scientific computing skills.

Topic Selection

This project is a group project. You must select a partner for this project and your topic for you presentation by Friday, October 24th.

Your project will be to develop modeling solutions to a past problem from the International Mathematical Contest in Modeling. You must choose an A or B problem from any year between 2005 and 2014.

Background Overview

On Monday, Nov 3rd, I will need a one-page overview of your project task. On this day, your team will give a 4 minute presentation to the class about your topic. Your one-page document and presentation should cover the following:

Model Descriptions

On Friday, November 14th, I will need a one-page description of your resources you will be using to solve this problem, and your choice of at least two approaches to the problem. Be sure to specify what input and output you expect from your approaches.

Rough Draft

On Wednesday, December 3rd, I will need an early rough-draft of your project paper. I recommend using LaTeX to write your paper, it is an extremely powerful editor, and is used to format many scientific papers.

Your paper should follow the guidelines below

Project Organization

Your paper must be at least 12 pages. Your paper should be readable by a layperson who is not familiar with your models but has a basic understanding of computer science and mathematics; essentially, write the paper for yourself before you took this class, based on the prereqs of Calculus and Foundation of CSCI. You should include the following sections

  1. Introduction
  2. Background
  3. Model Descriptions
  4. Sensitivity Testing
  5. Evaluation
  6. Conclusion
  7. Future Work
  8. References

Include any code and IPython documents you write as an appendix to your paper, it will not be counted toward the 12 pages.

Examples of excellent papers for similar MCM problems, and the judging criteria used, can be found in the UMAP Journal.

Be sure to make good use of figures and graphs to demonstrate your results, use proper grammar and spelling, and use proper citations.

I will provide feedback by December 8th on your paper.

Presentation

Finally, on Wednesday December 17th, 8:30-11:30pm, Your final paper will be due. Also, a 15 minute in-class presentation will be required. Time and material should be split evenly between all project partners. Your objective in the presentation is to fill us in on the main ideas of how you approached and modeled your topic. Leave at least one (1) minute for questions at the end of your presentation.

Practice is strongly encouraged prior to your actual presentation. The best way to be comfortable with presenting in front of an audience is to practice. You will be graded on both the organization and the presentation of your talk. The 15 minute time-limit will be strictly enforced to ensure equal time for all presentations.