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ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING & COMPUTER SCIENCE

ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING & COMPUTER SCIENCE. Degree programs in: Computer Engineering Computer Science Electrical Engineering Systems & Control Engineering. Department Overview. 29 faculty 48 major funded research projects totaling $9,548,089 www.eecs.cwru.edu for more information

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ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING & COMPUTER SCIENCE

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  1. ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING & COMPUTER SCIENCE Degree programs in: • Computer Engineering • Computer Science • Electrical Engineering • Systems & Control Engineering

  2. Department Overview • 29 faculty • 48 major funded research projects totaling $9,548,089 • www.eecs.cwru.edu for more information • Research-oriented department

  3. DEGREE PROGRAMS • Four undergraduate and graduate programs • 3 ABET accredited engineering programs • Electrical Engineering • Systems & Control Engineering • Computer Engineering • CSAB accredited Computer Science program • 400 Undergraduate students • 175 graduate students • Graduate 125 B.S., 45 M.S. and 15 Ph.D. degrees per year

  4. UG Timeline • Common freshman year • Declare major in department in March of freshman year • Sophomore year • “generic” sophomore year - programs differ by only three courses • Junior year • Begin co-op program at end of sophomore year • Senior year • Research - BS/MS program • Senior Project • TIME

  5. Generic Sophomore Year • Students who have not decided upon a major can take the following courses in their sophomore year and declare their majors at the end of the sophomore year. This “generic” sophomore year will allow them to declare CE, CS or EE and still graduate in 4 years without overloads, summer school, etc. Although this is not the recommended (best) sophomore year for any one major, it provides the student with more flexibility in delaying their choice of major until they have a better idea of what they want to do. In addition, the courses that they take in the sophomore year will give them technical exposure to each of the different majors.

  6. Special Programs • Undergraduate specific programs • CO-OP (~30% of our students CO-OP) • Global CO-OP • Junior Year Abroad • Undesignated B.S. • Integrated undergraduate/graduate programs • BS/MS program (60 students) • Masters in Engineering & Management • MS CO-OP Program

  7. EECS Organization • Computer Science • Electrical & Computer Engineering Case’s EECS programs encompass a wide spectrum ranging from biologically inspired robotics and bioinformatics to quantum computing and nanometer scale devices culminating in highly complex microsystems which constitute the forefront of the field today and for the foreseeable future.

  8. EECS Research Thrusts • Computer Science • Bioinformatics • Pervasive networks and distributed systems • Data mining and visualization • Electrical & Computer Engineering • Micro/nano systems • Microelectronics • Embedded systems • Robotics & intelligent systems • Systems biology

  9. Nationally Recognized Research Analysis of an Evolved Neural Circuit for Object Discrimination Automating “Peg-in-Maze” Robotic Assemblies • Class of assemblies, including clutch packs, gear meshing, etc. • Uncertainty exceeds assembly clearance, sense of touch required • Solution: Strategies (a switching between behaviors based upon continuous states, detected “events”, progress of assembly itself) Genomics Pathways Databases Prototype MEMS RF Low-Noise Oscillator MEMS Oscillator Demo Board Low Noise Output Spectrum at Celluar Telephony Band

  10. Where do our Graduates go? • Top employers • Microsoft, Intel, General Electric • Others • Rockwell, Keithley Instruments, IBM, Agilent, Hewlett-Packard, Accenture, Deloitte & Touche, Guidant, Medtronic, Motorola, Price WaterHouse, EMC

  11. Typical Starting Salary Data Disciplines High Low Avg # Bachelor's Degree • Computer Engineering $54,600 $40,000 $48,772 17 • Computer Science $100,000 $28,800 $53,480 11 • Electrical Engineering $70,000 $36,665 $49,013 25 • Systems & Control Engr $53,000 $46,000 $49,200 11 Average $69,400 $37,866 $50,116 Master's Degree • Computer Engineering $64,000 $50,000 $56,580 19 • Computer Science $75,000 $42,000 $56,825 20 • Electrical Engineering $63,000 $50,000 $56,100 10 • Systems & Control Engr * * * 1 Average $67,333 $47,333 $56,502 Source: Career Planning & Placement, 2000 Class

  12. Typical Starting Salary Data Disciplines High Low Avg # Bachelor's Degree • Computer Engineering $58,000 $36,156 $51,776 6 • Computer Science $67,000 $45,000 $56,892 12 • Electrical Engineering $115,000 $50,700 $64,750 10 • Systems & Control Engr $60,420 $48,000 $55,140 3 Source: Career Planning & Placement, 2001 Class

  13. Employment Opportunities

  14. Student testimonials

  15. Student testimonials

  16. Student testimonials

  17. FOR MORE INFORMATION • Prof. George Ernst,Computer Science, gwe@case.edu • Prof. Frank Merat, Associate Chair for Electrical & Computer Engineering, flm@case.edu • Web page: eecs.cwru.edu

  18. Detailed Degree Program Information

  19. Overview of our degrees

  20. BS CS PROGRAM

  21. CS Details • GRADUATION REQUIREMENT: 127 hours total • FOOTNOTES a One of these must be a humanities/social science course. b ENGR 210 is recommended because it provides flexibility in choice of major and advanced EECS courses. c Chosen from MATH 380 Introduction to Probability, STAT 312 Basic Statistics for Engineering and Science, STAT 313 Statistics for Experimenters, STAT 332 Statistics for Signal Processing, STAT 333 Uncertainty in Engineering and Science. d Course other than mathematics or computer science. e Students must select from an approved list of technical electives, at least two of which must come from a list approved by the EECS faculty.

  22. CS Details • The remaining three technical electives for the BS in Computer Science program may come from the following list of courses (or from the above list). But, a student also has the option of using these three electives to form a concentration is some technical area outside CS, e. g., mechanical engineering or physics. Although there is some flexibility in the selection of courses in a concentration area, normally they are courses required for majors in the area. If a student begins a particular concentration and then decides not to complete it, the remainder of the technical electives for their concentration must come from the following list of courses (or from the above list): • EECS 245 Electronic Circuits • EECS 246 Signals and Systems • EECS 285 Engineering in Community Service • EECS 304 Control Engineering I with Laboratory • EECS 306 Control Engineering II with Laboratory • EECS 309 Electromagnetic Fields I • EECS 313 Signal Processing • EECS 324 Simulation Techniques in Engineering • EECS 342 Introduction to Global Issues • EECS 346 Engineering Optimization • EECS 350 Industrial and Production Systems Engineering • EECS 351 Communications and Signal Analysis • EECS 352 Engineering Economics and Decision Making • EECS 354 Digital Communications • EECS 360 Manufacturing Operations and Automated Systems • EECS 381 Hybrid Systems • EECS 382 Microprocessor-Based Design • EECS 409 Discrete Event Systems • EECS 489 Robotics I • EMAE 250 Computers in Mechanical Engineering • ENGR 210 Circuits & Instrumentation • MATH 201 Introduction to Linear Algebra • MATH 303 Elementary Number Theory • MATH 307 Introduction to Abstract Algebra I • MATH 308 Introduction to Abstract Algebra II • MATH 330 Scientific Computing: Fundamentals and Applications • MATH 406 Mathematical Logic and Model Theory • MATH 410 Automata and Formal Languages • MATH 408 Introduction to Cryptology • MATH 413 Graph Theory • MATH 431 Introduction to Numerical Analysis • MATH 470 Matrix Theory • PHIL 201 Introduction to Logic • PHIL 306 Mathematical Logic • PHYS 221 Introduction to Modern Physics • PHYS 250 Mathematics, Physics and Computing • STAT 345 Theoretical Statistics I • STAT 346 Theoretical Statistics II • STAT 413 Reliability and Calibration • STAT 414 Industrial Statistics • STAT 427 Statistical Computing Technical Electives for the BS in Computer Science At least two technical electives for the BS in Computer Science program must come from the following list of courses: • EECS 251 Numerical Methods • EECS 301 Digital Logic Laboratory • EECS 315 Digital Systems Design • EECS 317 Computer Design Laboratory • EECS 318 VLSI/CAD • EECS 375 Autonomous Robotics • EECS 396M Special Topics: Computer Science • EECS 399M Computer Engineering Design Project • EECS 405 Data Structures and File Management • EECS 419 Computer System Architecture • EECS 423 Distributed Systems • EECS 425 Computer Communications Networks • EECS 428 Web Computing • EECS 430 Object Oriented Software Development • EECS 431 Software Engineering • EECS 433 Database Systems • EECS 435 Data Mining • EECS 436 Advances in Databases • EECS 440 Automata and Formal Languages • EECS 445 Formal Verification • EECS 458 BioInformatics • EECS 466 Computer Graphics • EECS 475 Autonomous Robotics • EECS 477 Dynamics of Adaptive Behavior • EECS 478 Computational Neuroscience • EECS 479 Seminar on Computational Neuroscience • EECS 484 Computational Intelligence I: Basic Principles • EECS 485 VLSI Systems • EECS 488 Embedded Systems Design • EECS 491 Intelligent Systems I

  23. BS CE PROGRAM

  24. CE Details • GRADUATION REQUIREMENT: 129 hours total • FOOTNOTES a One of these must be a humanities/social science course. b Technical electives are more generally defined as any course related to the principles and practice of computer engineering. This includes all EECS and MATH courses at the 200 level and above and can include courses from other programs. All technical electives which are not EECS or Math courses must be approved by the student's advisor. c The student must take either EECS 318 VLSI/CAD or EECS 338 Intro. to Operating Systems, AND a three credit hour technical elective. d Chosen from MATH 380 Introduction to Probability, STAT 312 Basic Statistics for Engineering and Science, STAT 313 Statistics for Experimenters, STAT 332 Statistics for Signal Processing, STAT 333 Uncertainty in Engineering and Science.

  25. BS EE PROGRAM

  26. EE Details • GRADUATION REQUIREMENT: 128 hours total • FOOTNOTES a Although not required students may elect to take ENGR 101 Freshman Engineering Field Service Project as their open elective in the freshman year. b Selected students may be invited to take PHYS 123, 124 in place of PHYS 121 and PHYS 122. c Students may replace this class with STAT 333 Uncertainty in Engineering and Science if approved by their advisor. d Technical electives will be chosen to fulfill the depth requirement and otherwise increase the student's understanding of electrical engineering. Courses used to satisfy the depth requirement must come from the department's list of depth areas and related courses. Technical electives not used to satisfy the depth requirement are more generally defined as any course related to the principles and practice of electrical engineering. This includes all EECS courses at the 200 level and above and can include courses from other programs. All non-EECS technical electives must be approved by the student's advisor. e This course must utilize statistics in electrical engineering applications and is typically EECS 351 Communications & Signal Analysis, EECS 354 Digital Communications or EECS 355 RF Communications. Other courses possible with approval of advisor. f CO-OP students may obtain design credit for one semester of Senior Project Lab if their CO-OP assignment included significant design responsibility; however, the student is still responsible for such course obligations as reports, presentations and ethics assignments. Design credit and fulfillment of remaining course responsibilities are arranged through the senior project instructor. g BS/MS students may also utilize EECS 651 M.S. Thesis to fulfill eight credits of senior project provided their thesis has adequate design content to meet the requirements of EECS 398L/399L. BS/MS students should see their thesis advisor for details.

  27. EE Details

  28. BS SY PROGRAM

  29. SY Details

  30. SY Details • GRADUATION REQUIREMENT: 127 hours total FOOTNOTES • Although not required, students may elect to take ENGR 101, Freshman Engineering Service Project as their open elective during the freshman year. • Selected students may be invited to take PHYS 124 and 125 in place of PHYS 121 and 122. • Choose from STAT 312, STAT 332, STAT 333. • CO-OP students may obtain credit for the first semester of Senior Project Lab if their CO-OP assignment includes significant design responsibility. This credit can be obtained by submitting a suitable written report and making an oral presentation on the CO-OP work, in coordination with the Senior Project instructor. • Signal Processing or Communication Systems technical elective. To be taken in any semester after EECS 246. Choose from EECS 313, EECS 351, or EECS 354. • Three of the six technical electives must be taken from one of the technical elective areas listed previously. The remaining three should be chosen from any of the remaining technical elective areas. • Students declare technical electives in the Fall of their Junior year. Each technical elective area has a faculty advisor to guide the student. This faculty advisor also acts as co-op advisor for the student.

  31. Questions or Comments??

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