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| Graduate
Courses In Information Science
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The following is a listing
of the courses offered in the Graduate Information
Science and Technology Program. The
courses, including descriptions and applicable
prerequisites, are listed by the official
course number. Please
note that some course numbers may have changed
as of July 2006 (the previous number is noted
in parentheses adjacent to the new number). The
renumbering of courses was undertaken to
make scheduling and advising more efficient.
New course numbers will be used for SPRING
2007 (2074). |
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- Foundations Area
- Profession Area
- Cognitive Area
- Systems and Technology Area
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| Note: All courses are 3 credits
unless otherwise specified. Admission prerequisites
for the Master of Science in Information Science
(MSIS) program are implicit prerequisites for INFSCI
courses. |
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| Foundations
area - Formal Foundations |
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INFSCI 2000 INTRODUCTION TO INFORMATION SCIENCE
Overview of the history, academic
roots, conceptual structure, and methodology of information
science. Explores principles and concepts that
underlie information processing, including information
theory, models of information storage and retrieval,
and human cognition. Basic processes of information
systems analysis, design and development.
INFSCI 2020 MATHEMATICAL FOUNDATIONS FOR INFORMATION
SCIENCE
Basic concepts of theoretical mathematics
needed to understand theoretical work in information
science, with exception of probability and statistics.
In particular, concepts from set theory, graph
theory, combinatorics, logic, abstract algebra,
topology, and mathematical analysis.
INFSCI
2040 (2100) RESEARCH
DESIGN
Beginning research design with emphasis
on the basic process of inquiry. Identifying and
articulating research problems, determining and describing
procedures for conducting research, designing data
collecting procedures, formulating testable hypotheses,
interpreting and drawing conclusions from data analysis,
and reporting research findings and implications.
(Prerequisite: INFSCI 2060 or equivalent)
INFSCI 2060 STATISTICS IN INFORMATION SCIENCE
Intermediate analytical course in applied
statistical methods: vector and matrix notation,
multiple correlation and regression, T and F distributions,
analysis of variance, planned comparisons and post
hoc comparisons, analysis of covariance, and nonparametric
techniques. Utilizes SPSS statistical programming
package. (Prerequisite: introductory statistics
course) |
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| Foundations
area - Applied Foundations |
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INFSCI 2120
INFORMATION AND CODING THEORY
Includes measures of information, information
sources, joint and conditional uncertainty,
noiseless and deterministic channels, reliable
messages through unreliable channels, channel
capacities, properties of codes, minimal
codes, and error-detecting and error-correcting
codes. Examines entropy as a measure of semantic
content. (Prerequisites: math and statistics)
INFSCI
2130 DECISION ANALYSIS AND DECISION SUPPORT
SYSTEMS
Introduction to decision analysis with elements
of human cognition under uncertainty, including
structuring decision problems and developing
creative decision options, quantifying uncertainty
and preferences, and combining uncertainty
and preferences to arrive at optimal decisions.
Foundations needed for applying the methods
of decision analysis in decision support
systems. NOTE: Can also be used to fulfill
distribution requirement in Cognitive Science
area.
INFSCI
2140 INFORMATION STORAGE AND RETRIEVAL
Problems and techniques related to storing
and accessing unstructured information with
an emphasis on textual information. Overview
of several approaches to information access
with a primary focus on search-based information
access. Covers automated retrieval system
design, content analysis, retrieval models,
result presentation, and system evaluation. Examines
applications of retrieval techniques on the
Web, in multimedia and multilingual environments,
and in text classification and event tracking. (Prerequisites:
introduction to logic and statistical analysis,
familiarity with a high-level programming
language)
INFSCI 2150 INTRODUCTION
TO SECURITY
Fundamental issues and first principles of security and information assurance.
Security policies, models and mechanisms related to confidentiality, integrity,
authentication, identification, and availability issues related to information
and information systems. Basics of cryptography such as key management and digital
signatures, etc. and network security such as PKI, IPSec, intrusion detection
and prevention. Risk management, security assurance and secure design principles.
Issues such as organizational security policy, legal and ethical issues in security,
standards and methodologies for security evaluation and certification. (Pre-requisite:
TELCOM 2000 OR equivalent background; or permission of Instructor)
INFSCI
2160 DATA MINING
Introduction to data mining techniques, including
data preprocessing, data mining primitives,
association rules, decision trees, cluster
analysis, classification and machine learning,
data visualization, and data warehousing.
Detailed applications from a wide variety
of domains. (Prerequisites: INFSCI 2020 or
permission of instructor)
TELCOM
2130 QUEUING THEORY
Development and application of the mathematical
techniques used for analyzing the performance
of communications networks. Topics include:
Markovian queues, Non-Markovian queues, products
form networks, approximation techniques,
non stationary queues. (Prerequisites: TELCOM
2120, 2310)
INFSCI 2170
CRYPTOGRAPHY (Cross listed with TELCOM 2820)
Principles of number theory, cryptographic algorithms and cryptanalysis. Steganography,
block and stream ciphers, secret key encryption (DES, RES, RE-N), primes, random
numbers, factoring, and discrete logarithms. Public key encryption (RSA, Diffie-Helman,
elliptical curve cryptography, N'TRU); key management, hash functions (MD5, SHA-1,
RIPEMD-160, HMAC), digital signatures, certificates and authentication protocols.
Cryptanalytic methods (known, chosen plaintext etc.) for secret and public key
schemes (linear and differential cryptanalysis, Pollard's rho method, number
field sieve, etc.). (Prerequisites: Algebra, College Mathematics, Digital
logic, Programming Language, TELCOM 2000/2100)
INFSCI 2180 (2906) KNOWLEDGE
REPRESENTATION AND THE SEMANTIC WEB
Introduction to core ideas of knowledge representation
and reasoning, including: predicate logic, resolution,
rule-based reasoning, object-based and description-based
representations, inheritance and default reasoning,
semantic web languages from XML to OWL, ontology
development, and issues concerning representation
of dimensions of the physical and social worlds. |
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| Profession
Area |
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INFSCI 2210 INFORMATION
ETHICS
Ethics as a prelude to learning the skills
of ethical decision-making and, then, to applying
these skills to the real and current challenges of
the information professions. Decision-making
and challenges related to information sources and
services in all formats and media; to the Internet
and other digital sources (cyberethics); and to information-related
topics in management. (Cross listed with LIS 2194
and TELCOM 2515)
INFSCI 2220 INFORMATION
POLICY
Introduction to information policy with a focus
on U.S. Federal policies. Issues and challenges
faced in developing and implementing policies
within organizations and companies, including
the protection and use of intellectual property,
First Amendment concerns, access to public information,
security and the protection of privacy of personally
identifiable information.
INFSCI
2821 (2901) INTRODUCTION
TO BIOMEDICAL INFORMATICS
Survey of fundamental concepts and activities
of information technology applied to health care.
Topics include computer-based medical records,
knowledge-based systems, telehealth, decision
theory and decision support, human-computer interfaces,
systems integration, the digital library, and
educational applications. Department-specific
applications such as pathology, radiology, psychiatry
and intensive care are also discussed. (Prerequisite:
permission of instructor)
INFSCI 2825 (2905) PROBABILISTIC
METHODS FOR COMPUTER-BASED DECISION SUPPORT
Computational approaches to probabilistic and
decision-theoretic inference. Particular focus
on the use of Bayesian networks and influence
diagrams. Medical applications of these techniques
and representations are emphasized. (Prerequisite:
permission of instructor)
LIS 2184 LEGAL
ISSUES IN INFORMATION HANDLING
Concepts, legislation, and case law about censorship, freedom of access to information,
privacy, copyright, professional liability, and other issues. Legal implications
and safeguards.
TELCOM 2420 PROJECT
MANAGEMENT
Techniques and tools to assist in the managing
process. Uses case study approach. (Prerequisite:
advanced standing)
TELCOM
2510 U.S. TELECOMMUNICATIONS POLICY
A historical review of U.S. telecommunications
policy, including both theoretical objectives
and practice. The role of the various
U.S. governmental agencies in the development
of the telecommunications environment. Recent
developments. (Prerequisites: TELCOM 2000/2100) |
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| Cognitive
Area - Cognitive Science |
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INFSCI 2300 HUMAN INFORMATION PROCESSING
Introduction to research and theory in human
cognition, including perception, attention, pattern
recognition, memory, representation of knowledge,
language, problem solving, reasoning, and decision
making, with emphasis on modeling human cognition
and implications for user interface design and
design of intelligent systems.
INFSCI 2350 HUMAN FACTORS IN SYSTEMS
Introduces principles for analysis of human performance in human-machine systems.
Emphasis on principles of human factors as applied to the design of systems
other than the graphical user interface (GUI) that is covered in Interactive
Systems INFSCI 2470. |
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| Cognitive
Area - Congnitive Science and Systems |
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INFSCI
2410 INTRODUCTION TO NEURAL NETWORKS
Introduces mathematical and computer techniques
used in constructing models of information
processing by parallel distributed processing
(PDP) networks; principles of input-output
functions and adaptation (learning) functions
in single units and in networks; examines
the relation between PDP networks, neurobiology,
artificial intelligence, and cognition. (Prerequisites:
INFSCI 2300, math, 1 programming language)
INFSCI 2420 NATURAL LANGUAGE PROCESSING
Overview of computational approaches to natural language processing including
issues in syntax, semantics, and pragmatics, as well as overall system architectures.
(Prerequisites: INFSCI 2300, 2500 (2610) or permission of instructor)
INFSCI 2440 ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE
Introduction to core ideas in Artificial Intelligence
including search, logic and deduction, reasoning
systems, knowledge representation, expert systems,
planning, machine learning and language understanding. (Prerequisites:
INFSCI 2300, 2500 (2610) or permission of instructor)
INFSCI 2450 ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE PROGRAMMING
TOOLS
Advanced programming course covering the implementation
and use of artificial intelligence programming
paradigms including: forward and backward rule-based
programming, pattern matching techniques, object
and frame-based programming, and knowledge-base
indexing and retrieval techniques. (Prerequisite:
INFSCI 2440 or permission of instructor)
INFSCI 2460 SPATIAL
REASONING FOR GIS
Fundamental issues in qualitative spatial reasoning, spatial languages, and spatial
decision-making. Applications of spatial reasoning including problems of
navigation and interface issues for GIS. (Prerequisite: INFSCI
2300)
INFSCI 2470 INTERACTIVE SYSTEM DESIGN
Introduction to principles and techniques of
interactive system design. Emphasis on
practical skills of user interface design
and evaluation. Builds a connection between human
information processing and interactive system
design practice, reviews interactive programming
for major interface paradigms, and covers main
analysis and evaluation techniques of modern
usability engineering. Focuses on GUI and Internet
programming techniques and project-based experience
in the design and evaluation of practical user
interfaces. (Prerequisites: INFSCI 2300, 2710,
C) |
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| Systems
and Technology Area - General Systems
and Technology |
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INFSCI 2500 (2610) DATA
STRUCTURES
Theory and application of data structures. Data and file structures and their
appropriateness to various applications. (Prerequisite: one programming language)
INFSCI
2510 INFORMATION SYSTEMS ANALYSIS
Requirements management; best practices in
eliciting, documenting and verifying requirements;
writing effective use cases; construction of
UML-compliant models (class, state and activity
diagrams); specification of user interface
and data layers; rapid prototyping.
INFSCI
2511 INFORMATION SYSTEMS DESIGN
Object-oriented design best practices; principles
of system architecture; design patterns;
requirements traceability; construction of
UML-compliant models (class, sequence, communication
and package diagrams); refactoring; iterative
development of system prototype. Requires
knowledge of fundamental OO programming concepts
including abstract classes, interfaces, inheritance,
polymorphism, and message passing. (Prerequisite:
INFSCI 2510, object-oriented programming
course. Corequisite: database course)
INFSCI 2540 SOFTWARE ENGINEERING
Critical analysis of leading iterative software
development processes; TSP/PSP, Unified Process,
Extreme Programming and related agile processes;
enterprise management and control of software
projects (CMM and COBIT); configuration and
change management; quality assurance and testing.
INFSCI
2550 CLIENT-SERVER SYSTEMS
Analysis and design of distributed systems.
Emphasis on distributed applications and
various protocols used in such applications. Explores
algorithms for various iterative and concurrent
server designs as well as the design of
application level protocols. Includes various
languages and operating systems. (Prerequisites:
TELCOM 2300 or competence in C and Unix,
INFSCI 2500 (2610))
INFSCI 2560 (2870) WEB
TECHNOLOGIES AND STANDARDS
Covers core technologies and standards for distributed systems, especially web
based distributed systems. Includes an overview of the standardization
process and the standards organizations. Looks at network and data standards
with significant attention to HTML,XML, http, URL and other web technologies
including APIs to programming with them.
INFSCI 2570 MANAGEMENT
INFORMATION SYSTEMS
Analysis and design of information systems
to support the strategic management level of
an organization. Specific foci on systems
support for Business Process Reengineering,
Business Intelligence and decision support. (Prerequisite:
INFSCI 2510. Corequisite: database course)
INFSCI 2591 (2611) ALGORITHM
DESIGN
Fundamentals of algorithm design including
greedy algorithms, divide-and-conquer algorithms,
dynamic programming, heuristics and approximate
algorithms, parallel and distributed algorithms,
multi-dimensional data structures, time complexity
of algorithms, and development of programs
from algorithms. (Prerequisite: INFSCI 2500
(2610))
INFSCI 2592 (2630) ARCHITECTURES
AND ASSEMBLER LANGUAGE
Computer architecture and assembly language
programming. One main frame (i.e., VAX) and
several microarchitectures. Demonstration of
assembly language programming. (Prerequisite:
one programming language)
INFSCI 2593 (2670) OPERATING
SYSTEMS
Fundamentals of operating systems: memory management,
processor management, file and i/o management.
Particular topics include threads, CPU scheduling,
process synchronization and deadlock, paging,
segmentation and virtual memory, protection
and security, and distributed systems. Client-server
architecture is handled in the context of distributed
systems. Particular systems are treated in
the context of examples. (Prerequisites: INFSCI
2500 (2610), 2592 (2630)) |
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| Systems
and Technology Area - networks and security |
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TELCOM
2000 INTRODUCTION TO TELECOMMUNICATIONS
Graduate level introduction to voice and data communications for non-telecommunications
majors. Covers OSI stack with an emphasis on the lower layers. Overview of the
public switched telephone network. Not open to students who have taken INFSCI
2581 or TELCOM 2100. (Prerequisite: algebra, advisor’s approval)
TELCOM
2110 NETWORK DESIGN
Methods and techniques for the design of
computer/telecommunication networks. Management
and business perspectives on network design,
estimation of traffic demand and application
requirements, network cost analysis, topological
design, capacity assignment, graph
theory and optimization based design algorithms,
virtual network design, network design tools,
wireless network design issues, availability
analysis and survivable network design. (Prerequisites:
TELCOM 2000/2100)
TELCOM 2300 SOFTWARE TOOLS AND TECHNIQUES
For students who were not computer science or
information science undergraduates. Builds upon
the programming skills required for admission
and presents concepts, algorithms, and methodologies
related to data structures, file systems, and
operating systems essential to other courses
in the MSIS/MST curricula. (This course does
not fulfill the Systems and Technology distribution
requirement for the MSIS degree.) (Prerequisite:
structured programming language)
INFSCI 2620 (2570) DEVELOPING
SECURE SYSTEMS
Design and implementation of secure systems. Principles and practice of trustworthy
computing, secure and high assurance software development process and lifecycle
models. Secure software design using UMLsec, secure design of operating systems
and network services, database and applications. Secure webs services, COTS-based
and service-oriented systems. Software assurance tools and techniques such as
code analysis and testing, evaluation and certification of software. Secure programming
techniques. (Prerequisite: INFSCI 2150)
INFSCI 2621 (2820) SECURITY
MANAGEMENT
Administration and management of security of enterprise information systems and
networks. Principles and tools related to intrusion detection systems, vulnerability
analysis, anomaly detection, computer forensics, application logging, auditing
and data management, risk management, contingency planning and incident handling,
digital immune systems, and alarms and responses. Security standards, evaluation
and certification process; security planning, ethical and legal issues in information;
privacy, traceability and cyber-evidence. (Prerequisites: INFSCI 2150,
TELCOM 2821)
INFSCI 2629 (2190) CAPSTONE
IN SECURITY
Integrative class for masters students in their
final semester of the SAIS track. Combination
of business and technical case studies and group
projects. Case studies focus on business/economics
aspects of providing information assurance and
how this service impacts technology. Group
projects involve design and development of a
prototype secure and survivable information system
including application development, system deployment,
system optimization and system economics. (Prerequisites:
INFSCI 2150/TELCOM 2810, TELCOM 2821)
INFSCI 2640 PROGRAMMING LANGUAGES AND ENVIRONMENTS
A comparative study of four types of computer
languages: control structured, list processing,
logic processing, and object oriented. The course
contrasts the language types with respect to
the expression of programs, data models, execution
models, naming and abstraction, and interactive
programs. (Prerequisites: INFSCI 2500 (2610),
a high-level programming language, and either
2592 (2630) or a 2nd high-level language) |
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| Systems
and Technology Area - Database and Web |
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INFSCI 2710 DATABASE MANAGEMENT Basic graduate course on database systems. Centralized
relational database systems with emphasis on
database design, implementation, and administration.
Comprehensive coverage of SQL, data modeling,
normalization, storage management, transaction
management, and query evaluation. Students will
develop practical skills in building and maintaining
realistic medium-scale database systems. Also
covers more advanced topics including data warehousing
and OLAP. (Prerequisite: INFSCI 2500 (2610))
INFSCI
2711 ADVANCED TOPIC IN DATABASE MANAGEMENT
Advanced graduate course on database systems.
Key issues that typically arise in the context
of large-scale enterprise database management
in heterogeneous wide-area environments including
distributed and non-relational database systems,
network-centric data management, Web-based
information systems, heterogeneous databases,
information integration, and wireless data
management. (Prerequisite: INFSCI 2710)
INFSCI 2730 E-BUSINESS
Conceptualization of e-business in the context of markets, business practices,
and information theory. Implementation of e-business websites
and services via various programming languages. Examines various models
for online consumer systems, business-to-business systems, and enterprise computing--e.g.,
supply chain models. Covers related technologies in document processing,
telecommunications, and security. (Prerequisites: INFSCI 2560 (2870),
2710, and either 2511 or 2470; familiarity with procedural and object oriented
programming languages as well as Integrated Development Environments)
INFSCI 2731 (2771) SECURITY
IN E-COMMERCE
Covers the technology, concepts, issues and principles
that are important in the design and implementation
of secure e‑commerce systems. Examines
technology for protecting electronic commerce.
It will include discussion of basic security
principles, as well as the issues, policy and
standards particular to e‑commerce applications. (Prerequisites:
INFSCI 2150 and 2560 (2870))
INFSCI 2739 WEB
SERVICES AND DISTRIBUTED COMPUTING
Looks at advanced techniques to client server
computing. Covers design techniques necessary
for organizing very large web sites. Integrates
the knowledge and skills from e-business and
web technologies to develop a functioning distributed
application using web services, RMI, RSS, AJAX,
etc. (Prerequisites: 2550, 2560 (2870)
and 2730 (2872))
INFSCI 2780 INTERACTIVE GRAPHICS
Computer graphics, point plotting techniques,
line drawing display, clipping and windowing,
display lines, geometric models, picture structure,
graphic input devices and techniques, event handling,
raster graphics, solid area scan conversion,
three-dimensional graphics, shading, and user-interface
design related to the associated behavioral factors
in INFSCI 2300 and INFSCI 2350. (Prerequisites:
INFSCI 2500 (2610), linear algebra, C) |
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| Systems
and Technology Area -
Human Centered |
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INFSCI 2801 (2720) GEOSPATIAL
INFORMATION SYSTEMS (GIS)
Introduction to the fundamentals
of GIS. Topics include GIS components, geospatial
data structures, geospatial databases, geospatial
data integration and conversion, overlay analysis,
proximity analysis, network analysis, buffering,
topology, and GIS tools (hardware and software). (Prerequisites:
INFSCI 2500 (2610))
INFSCI 2802 (2751) INTERNET-BASED & INTEROPERABLE
GIS
GIS development and applications for the internet,
including issues of and solutions to interoperability
in GIS. Design and development of internet-based
GIS, distributed geoprocessing on the internet,
interoperability in GIS, and a selection of emerging
applications possible through internet-based
GIS. (Prerequisite: INFSCI 2801 (2720))
INFSCI 2809 SPATIAL
MODELING AND ANALYSIS
Spatial analysis, spatial autocorrelation,
spatial interpolation, spatial regression,
spatial data structures and indexing, data
structures and algorithms for surfaces, and
spatiotemporal databases. (Prerequisite:
INFSCI 2801 (2720))
TELCOM 2200 PHYSICAL
LAYER OF COMMUNICATIONS 1
For students who were not electrical engineering undergraduates. Fundamental
phenomena, components, and concepts related to electricity and electronics required
for TELCOM 2210, as well as for other courses in the curriculum. Telcom applications
of AC circuits and bandwidth, semiconductors and amplifiers, digital electronics
and logic design, Fourier theory and frequency analysis. (Prerequisite: Calculus)
Telecommunications courses numbered 2100-2399
may be used to meet the Systems and Technology
Requirement with permission of the advisor. See
Telecommunications course descriptions for prerequisites
and co-requisites.
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Independent Study and Special Topics |
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Independent studies are intended to cover
advanced material outside of or beyond the scope
of current course offerings.
INFSCI 2910 INDEPENDENT
STUDY: FOUNDATIONS (1 – 3 credits)
INFSCI 2930 INDEPENDENT
STUDY: COGNITIVE (1 – 3 credits)
INFSCI 2950 INDEPENDENT
STUDY: SYSTEMS (1 – 3 credits) |
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| Special Topics |
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These courses are offered on specialized and
current topics.
INFSCI 2915 SPECIAL
TOPICS: FOUNDATIONS
INFSCI 2935 SPECIAL
TOPICS: COGNITIVE
INFSCI 2955 SPECIAL
TOPICS: SYSTEMS/WEB ENGINEERING
Because of the complexity of digital libraries
and the diverse nature of their audiences, a thorough,
systematic approach is required for the successful
development of digital library projects. Web
Engineering brings a structured methodology utilized
in software engineering to Web development projects.
The course addresses the concepts, methods, technologies,
and techniques of developing Web sites that collect,
organize and expose information resources. Topics
covered include requirements engineering for Web
applications, design methods and technologies,
interface design, usability of web applications,
accessibility, testing, metrics, operation and
maintenance of Web applications, security, and
project management. Specific technologies
covered in this course include client-side (XHTML,
JavaScript, and CSS) and server-side (Perl and
PHP).
INFSCI 2980 (2940) PRACTICUM
For students who desire experience in applying
the knowledge and skills acquired in their
course work and laboratory sessions. Students
are responsible for arranging a practicum with
a business or organization. (Prerequisites:
18 credits and permission of advisor) |
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| Thesis |
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INFSCI
2995 (2950) THESIS
The thesis is a report of original, theoretical,
or laboratory work suitable for publication.
(Prerequisites: 24 credits and permission
of advisor) |
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| Doctoral Courses |
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INFSCI 3005 INTRO
TO DOCTORAL PROGRAM 1
An introduction to the purpose and nature
of doctoral studies in information science, theories
and processes in scholarly research and the current
state of research in the discipline. Graduate
faculty in the program will present and discuss
their current interests with students. (Prerequisites:
Enrollment in the doctoral program in information
science) |
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| Advanced
Topics |
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Analysis of journal articles, books, and conference
proceedings involving issues in information science.
Techniques for preparing for the preliminary
and comprehensive examinations.
INFSCI 3110 ADVANCED
TOPICS: FOUNDATIONS
INFSCI 3130 ADVANCED
TOPICS: COGNITIVE
INFSCI 3150 ADVANCED
TOPICS: SYSTEMS |
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| Research
Seminars |
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Seminars coupled with the research program
of a faculty sponsor or advisor. Of the 18 credit
seminar requirement, no more than 6 should be
research seminar credits.
INFSCI 3210 RESEARCH
SEMINAR: FOUNDATIONS
INFSCI 3230 RESEARCH
SEMINAR: COGNITIVE
INFSCI 3250 RESEARCH
SEMINAR: SYSTEMS |
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| Doctoral Seminars |
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Doctoral students are required to take a minimum
of 18 credits of doctoral seminars. Seminars
prepare students for the comprehensive examination
and for doctoral research. (Prerequisites: satisfactory
completion of the preliminary examination and
admission to doctoral study in the department)
INFSCI 3310 DOCTORAL
SEMINAR: FOUNDATIONS
INFSCI 3330 DOCTORAL
SEMINAR: COGNITIVE
INFSCI 3350 DOCTORAL
SEMINAR: SYSTEMS |
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| Dissertation |
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| INFSCI
3990 DISSERTATION
FTDM FULL-TIME DISSERTATION STUDY
Open to PhD students who have completed all coursework
and who have already completed 18 credit hours
of dissertation study. |
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| webmaster
For information about Admissions & Financial Aid, please
contact
Shabana Reza at 800.672.9435
Information Science & Technology Email: isinq@sis.pitt.edu
Telecommunications Email: teleinq@sis.pitt.edu
Library & Information Science Email: lisinq@sis.pitt.edu
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