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== '''Welcome to the 2015 Edition of 6.034'''==
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== '''Welcome to the 2016 Edition of 6.034'''==
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== '''What should I take next?'''==
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<big>
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Updated 30 January 2016.  There may be additions through registration day.
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====Subjects by Right Now Lecturers, Spring====
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{| border=1 cellspacing=0 cellpadding=3 style="font-size:90%;"
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! Instructor !! Right Now Talk !! Number!! Title
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|-
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| Gerald Sussman || Propagator networks || 6.945 || Large-scale symbolic systems
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|-
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| Ed Boyden || Enlarging brain tissue || 20.309 || Biological instrumentation and software
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|-
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| Julie Shah || Getting people on the same page || 16.35 || Real time systems and software
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|-
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| Pawan Sinha et al.|| The vision of the newly sighted || 9.012 || Cognitive science
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|-
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| Patrick Winston || Understanding stories || 6.803/6.833 || The Human Intelligence Enterprise
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|}
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Note that 6.803/6.833 is a lotteried subject, oversubscribed.  See
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[http://courses.csail.mit.edu/6.803/index.html home page].
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====Other subjects of note, Spring====
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{| border=1 cellspacing=0 cellpadding=3 style="font-size:90%;"
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! Instructor !! Number!! Title
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|-
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| Brian Williams || 6.834J/16.412J || Cognitive Robotics
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|-
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| Barzilay-Jaakkola-Kaelbling || 6.036 ||Introduction to Machine Learning
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|}
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6.036 could be called Computational Statistics.  It does not about perception, cognition,
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or action, but it is a valuable subject that everyone should take.
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====Other subjects of note, Fall====
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{| border=1 cellspacing=0 cellpadding=3 style="font-size:90%;"
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! Instructor !!  Number!! Title
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|-
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| Robert Berwick || 6.863 || Natural Language and the Computer Representation of Knowledge
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|-
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| Gerald Sussman || 6.946 || Classical mechanics: a computational approach
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|-
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| Brian Williams || 16.410J/16.413J || Principles of Autonomy and Decision Making
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|-
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|}
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====Subjects associated with the Center for Brains, Minds, and Machines====
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[http://cbmm.mit.edu/education/courses Many subjects] are taught, Spring and Fall, by faculty associated
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with the
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[http://cbmm.mit.edu/ Center for Brains Minds and Machines].
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<!-->
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===We are pleased to note ...===
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...that Bloomberg has listed 6.034 as among [http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2015-06-11/five-of-the-best-computer-science-classes-in-the-country "Five of the Best Computer Science Classes in the U.S."]
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<-->
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===Road map:===
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To see how 6.034 outcomes relate to the outcomes of other subjects in the Course 6 curriculum, see the graphical display in the [http://6004.mit.edu/gmap/public.html?focus=6.034 6.034 Curricular Goals Map]
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===Logistical stuff:===
===Logistical stuff:===
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* [[Office Hours | Office Hours]]
* [[Office Hours | Office Hours]]
* [[Reference material and playlist | What material will be on the quiz?]]
* [[Reference material and playlist | What material will be on the quiz?]]
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* [http://goo.gl/forms/5Q6X53fNrE Suggestion Box] <!--jmn's 2015 edition-->
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* [http://goo.gl/forms/5Q6X53fNrE Suggestion Box]
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<!--
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* [https://docs.google.com/spreadsheet/viewform?formkey=dGU5NkkzdGdsLWpITnZxQlJ6UHdDUUE6MQ Suggestion Box] (old)
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-->
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===Reference stuff:===
===Reference stuff:===
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* [[Labs]] (also known as "problem sets")
* [[Labs]] (also known as "problem sets")
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* [http://piazza.com/mit/fall2015/6034 Piazza]
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* [http://piazza.com/mit/fall2016/6034 Piazza]
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<!-- fix: * '''NEW:''' [http://web.mit.edu/6.034/www/sigmoid/ Grade Calculator] -->
* [[Demonstrations]]
* [[Demonstrations]]
* [http://web.mit.edu/dxh/www/ Dylan's AI Demonstrations]
* [http://web.mit.edu/dxh/www/ Dylan's AI Demonstrations]
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* '''NEW:''' [http://web.mit.edu/6.034/www/sigmoid/ Grade Calculator]
 
* [http://courses.csail.mit.edu/6.034f/Examinations/ Quiz archive]
* [http://courses.csail.mit.edu/6.034f/Examinations/ Quiz archive]
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Note that the current TA mailing list is 6.034-2015-support at mit.edu.
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Note that the current staff mailing list is '''6.034-2016-staff''' at mit.edu.
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<!-- BEGIN OLD REFERENCE MATERIAL
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* [http://web.mit.edu/dxh/www/sigmoid/ Dylan's Grade Calculator]
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* [http://logical.ai/6.034/ Quiz archive]
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===2014 Surveys:===
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* [http://courses.csail.mit.edu/6.034f/2014polls/Workload.pdf End of term workload survey] 
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* [http://courses.csail.mit.edu/6.034f/2014polls/FrancisChen.pdf Francis Chen's confidence survey, Executive Summary] 
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* [[TA Notes | Notes]] on most of the primary topics
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* [[Recitation Handouts]]
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* [[Objectives and desired outcomes | Statement of objectives and desired outcomes]]
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([[Index]])
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Note that the TA address is: 6.034-2013-staff@mit.edu
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This address, used a year ago, is now a black hole: fa13-6.034-staff@mit.edu
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-->
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<!--===Recitation assignment:===
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Ignore the registrar's assignment.  Fill in this
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[[media:signup.pdf | form]]
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and put it in the plastic bin outside Professor Winston's office, 32-251.
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-->
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== News ==
== News ==
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=== 10 December 2015 ===
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===20 October 2016: Quiz 2 thresholds===
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Quiz 2 will be returned in recitations on Monday and Tuesday.  Beginning Wednesday, you may pick up your quiz from Professor Winston's office ([http://web.mit.edu/6.034/www/32-251.jpg 32-251]) when he is in, or contact your TA to arrange a pick-up. Thresholds are:  
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[[Office Hours#Final Review Sessions|Final review sessions]] are tomorrow.  Quizzes can be picked up between sessions, on the hour.
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=== 7 December 2015 ===
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We have released the promised grade calculator.  See reference stuff above.
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=== 3 December 2015 ===
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Quiz 4 will be returned in the final recitations, next Monday and Tuesday.  After Tuesday, you may pick up your quiz from Professor Winston's office ([http://aurellem.org/6.868/32-251.jpg 32-251]) when he is in, or contact your TA to arrange a pick-up. Thresholds are:  
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{| cellpadding=2 border=1 cellspacing=2
{| cellpadding=2 border=1 cellspacing=2
|-
|-
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| ||Thorough understanding (5) ||Acceptable understanding (4)|| Some understanding (3) / needs work
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| ||Thorough understanding (5) ||Acceptable understanding (4)|| Some understanding (3) / Needs work
|-  
|-  
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| style="text-align:left;" | Problem 1: Adaboost || ≥ 44 || ≥ 39 || ≥ 33
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| style="text-align:left;" | Problem 1: Constraints || ≥ 45 || ≥ 39 || ≥ 33
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|-
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| style="text-align:left;" | Problem 2: ID Trees || ≥ 31 || ≥ 24 || ≥ 20
|-
|-
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| style="text-align:left;" | Problem 2: Bayes Nets || ≥ 44 || ≥ 37 || ≥ 30
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| style="text-align:left;" | Problem 3: kNN || ≥ 12 || ≥ 9 || ≥ 6
|-
|-
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| style="text-align:left;" |Total || ≥ 88 || ≥ 76 || ≥ 63
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| style="text-align:left;" | '''Total''' || '''≥ 88''' || '''72''' || '''59'''
|}
|}
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{| cellpadding=2 border=1 cellspacing=2
{| cellpadding=2 border=1 cellspacing=2
|-
|-
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| ||Thorough understanding (5) ||Acceptable understanding (4)|| Some understanding (3) / needs work
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| ||Thorough understanding (5) ||Acceptable understanding (4)|| Some understanding (3) / Needs work
|-  
|-  
| style="text-align:left;" |Spiritual and right-now || ≥ 5 || ≥ 4 || ≥ 3
| style="text-align:left;" |Spiritual and right-now || ≥ 5 || ≥ 4 || ≥ 3
|}
|}
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=== 1 December 2015 ===
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===18 October 2016: Quiz 2 locations===
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Quiz 2 is tomorrow during class time (10 AM). If you were in Walker for the first quiz, you will be in 10-250, and vice versa.  That is:
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*Family name A-L: 10-250
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*Family name M-Z: Walker, 3rd floor
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Quiz 4 is tomorrow during class time (10 AM).  Locations are the same as for Quiz 2:
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===30 September 2016: Right now with Professor Gerald Sussman===
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* Family name A-L: 10-250
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* Family name M-Z: Walker, 3rd floor
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=== 18 November 2015 ===
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===28 September 2016: Quiz 1 thresholds===
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Quiz 1 will be returned in recitations on Monday and Tuesday.  Beginning Wednesday, you may pick up your quiz from Professor Winston's office ([http://web.mit.edu/6.034/www/32-251.jpg 32-251]) when he is in, or contact your TA to arrange a pick-up. Thresholds are:  
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Quiz 3 will be returned in recitations next Monday and Tuesday.  After Tuesday, you may pick up your quiz from Professor Winston's office ([http://aurellem.org/6.868/32-251.jpg 32-251]) when he is in, or contact your TA to arrange a pick-up. Thresholds are:  
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{| cellpadding=2 border=1 cellspacing=2
{| cellpadding=2 border=1 cellspacing=2
|-
|-
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| ||Thorough understanding (5) ||Acceptable understanding (4)|| Some understanding (3) / needs work
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| ||Thorough understanding (5) ||Acceptable understanding (4)|| Some understanding (3) / Needs work
|-  
|-  
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| style="text-align:left;" | Problem 1: Neural Nets || ≥ 44 || ≥ 39 || ≥ 32
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| style="text-align:left;" | Problem 1: Search || ≥ 31 || ≥ 26 || ≥ 21
|-
|-
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| style="text-align:left;" | Problem 2: Support Vector Machines || ≥ 45 || ≥ 41 || ≥ 34
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| style="text-align:left;" | Problem 2: Rule-Based Systems || ≥ 36 || ≥ 30 || ≥ 26
|-
|-
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| style="text-align:left;" |Total || ≥ 89 || ≥ 80 || ≥ 66
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| style="text-align:left;" | Problem 3: Games || ≥ 20 || ≥ 16 || ≥ 12
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|-
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| style="text-align:left;" | '''Total''' || '''87''' || '''72''' || '''59'''
|}
|}
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<!--
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{| cellpadding=2 border=1 cellspacing=2
{| cellpadding=2 border=1 cellspacing=2
|-
|-
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| ||Thorough understanding (5) ||Acceptable understanding (4)|| Some understanding (3) / needs work
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| ||Thorough understanding (5) ||Acceptable understanding (4)|| Some understanding (3) / Needs work
|-  
|-  
| style="text-align:left;" |Spiritual and right-now || ≥ 5 || ≥ 4 || ≥ 3
| style="text-align:left;" |Spiritual and right-now || ≥ 5 || ≥ 4 || ≥ 3
|}
|}
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-->
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=== 17 November 2015 ===
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===27 September 2016: Quiz 1 locations===
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Quiz 1 is tomorrow during class time (10 AM). Half of you will take the quiz in Walker, half in 10-250, enabling less crowded conditions. Locations:
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*Family name A-L: Walker, 3rd floor
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*Family name M-Z: 10-250
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Quiz 3 is tomorrow during class time (10 AM).  Locations are the same as for Quiz 1:
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===21 September 2016: Final date announced===
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* Family name A-L: Walker, 3rd floor
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* Family name M-Z: 10-250
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=== 23 October 2015 ===
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We have just learned that the 6.034 final will be Tuesday, 20 December 2016, 1:30 to 4:30.  Conflict exam schedule will not be set until just after drop date.
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Quiz 2 will be returned in recitations next Monday and Tuesday.  After Tuesday, you may pick up your quiz from [http://aurellem.org/6.868/32-251.jpg Prof. Winston's office] when he is in, or contact your TA to arrange a pick-up. Thresholds are:
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===19 September 2016: Lab 3 released===
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[[Lab 3]] has been released.  Lab 3 covers games, which will be one of the three topics on Quiz 1.  In keeping with our principle of having labs due before the relevant quiz, Lab 3 will be due next Monday, September 26; Quiz 1 will follow on Wednesday, September 28.  
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{| cellpadding=2 border=1 cellspacing=2
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Quiz 1 covers rule-based systems (Lab 1), search (Lab 2), and games (Lab 3).
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|-
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| ||Thorough understanding (5) ||Acceptable understanding (4)|| Some understanding (3) / needs work
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|-
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| style="text-align:left;" | Problem 1: Constraint Satisfaction Problems || ≥ 44 || ≥ 40 || ≥ 35
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|-
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| style="text-align:left;" | Problem 2: ID Trees & k-Nearest Neighbors || ≥ 45 || ≥ 40 || ≥ 35
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|-
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| style="text-align:left;" |Total || ≥ 89 || ≥ 80 || ≥ 70
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|}
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===15 September 2016: Lab 2 released; Lab 0 solution + office hours posted===
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{| cellpadding=2 border=1 cellspacing=2
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Three announcements:
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|-
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|-
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| style="text-align:left;" |Spiritual and right-now || ≥ 5 || ≥ 4 || ≥ 3
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|}
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=== 20 October 2015 ===
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1. [[Lab 2]], on basic search (yesterday's lecture) and optimal search (tomorrow's lecture), has been released.  Lab 2 is due by Thusday, September 22 at 10:00pm.  Labs 1 and 2 are due in the same week, so we recommend working on them in parallel.  You can think of them as one longer lab, split into two separately graded sections.
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Quiz 2 is tomorrow during class time (10 AM).  If you were in Walker for the first quiz, you will be in 10-250, and vice versa.  Thus, locations are:
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2. The solution to Lab 0 is now viewable (and downloadable) online:
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* Family name A-L: 10-250
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http://web.mit.edu/6.034/www/labs/lab0_solution.py
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* Family name M-Z: Walker, 3rd floor
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=== 30 September 2015 ===
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Although we generally will not post lab solutions, we are providing this one for Lab 0 to demonstrate some useful implementation techniques that may come in handy for future labs, as well as few fun Python tricks.
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Quiz 1 will be returned in recitations next Monday and TuesdayAfter Tuesday, you may pick up your quiz from [http://aurellem.org/6.868/32-251.jpg Prof. Winston's office] when he is in. Thresholds are:
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3. The weekly [[Office Hours|office hour schedule]] for the semester is available.  Room numbers will be added to the page as we receive them from the scheduling officeThroughout the semester, the page will be updated with any last-minute changes to office-hour times or locations.
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{| cellpadding=2 border=1 cellspacing=2
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===14 September 2016: 3-unit add-on subject - Important announcements===
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|-
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A couple of announcements regarding the 3-unit add-on section taught on
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| ||Thorough understanding (5) ||Acceptable understanding (4)|| Some understanding (3) / needs work
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Fridays.
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|-  
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| style="text-align:left;" | Problem 1: Rule-Based Systems || ≥ 35 || ≥ 31 || ≥ 26
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| style="text-align:left;" | Problem 2: Search || ≥ 26 || ≥ 22 || ≥ 18
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| style="text-align:left;" | Problem 3: Games || ≥ 27 || ≥ 23 || ≥ 20
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|-
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| style="text-align:left;" |Total || ≥ 88 || ≥ 76 || ≥ 64
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|}
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=== 29 September 2015 ===
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1. If you would like to get credit for it, please register on-line in
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the usual way (using the Registrar's link) using the subject number
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6.S063.
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Quiz 1 is tomorrow during class time (10 AM)Half of you will take the quiz in Walker, half in 10-250, enabling less crowded conditionsLocations:
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2. We will have 2 Friday sessions, 2pm and 3pmFor people who came
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* Family name A-L: Walker, 3rd floor
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last time and filled in preference forms, it appears that we will have
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* Family name M-Z: 10-250
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enough space so that you can attend the time you prefer, either 2 or 3
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pm, without having to re-assign anyone or run a lotteryIf you didn't
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come last week and want to sign up, you still can. Listeners are
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welcome.
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=== 24 September 2015 ===
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We're still waiting for the numbers to stabilize, so for this week we
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will hold both the 2pm and 3pm sections in 10-250.  We will most likely
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move to more reasonably sized rooms after this week.
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Final has been scheduled for Wednesday, 16 December, 9am-12pm, Johnson.
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===12 September 2016: Lab 1 released===
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[[Lab 1]], on rule-based systems, has been released.  It is due by next Tuesday, September 20, at 10:00pm.
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=== 23 September 2015 ===
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===10 September 2016: Recitation assignments===
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...are now available via the [https://ai6034.mit.edu:444/recitation/ Recitation Self-Service page] (certificates required).  If you have not been assigned to a section, please use the page to join one.
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Good news! If you have been unable to submit labs through Windows, we have found a solution.  The source of the problem is Python versions 2.6.5 through 2.7.3. The recommended solution is to install a version of Python >= 2.7.4 or <= 2.6.4; we recommend the latest stable release, Python 2.7.10.
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===Summer 2016===
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=== 19 September 2015 ===
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====New opportunity in 2016====
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The online tester for Lab 2 is now live!  If you have already downloaded the files for Lab 2, you will need to add a patch to lab2.py. Simply copy all the lines from [http://web.mit.edu/6.034/www/labs/lab2/patch.txt patch.txt] and paste them at the bottom of your lab2.py file.  (If you have not yet downloaded Lab 2, the files in lab2.zip and online are already up-to-date as of 4pm today, so no need to patch.)
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The 2016 edition of 6.034 will offer an optional 3-unit add-on set of lectures given by Professor Robert C. Berwick. This addition will supplement the main lectures and recitations because it will focus on the science side of 6.034, addressing long-standing scientific questions and biological intelligence, rather than existing tools for building applications.   Evolution and  human language will be emphasized. 
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Second, we are trying to understand our tester's incompatibility with certain combinations of Windows and Python versions. If you have successfully or unsuccessfully submitted a lab on Windows, you can help us by telling us your Windows and Python versions using [http://goo.gl/forms/33pHVWlwIM this form], or by e-mail to jmn@.
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The add on is scheduled to meet on Fridays, either 2-3pm or 3-4pm, in room 36-372.  <!--You can express interest via [https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSdy_71vzWWNJLM4eiBUMOjbIVxs93D4b-5HE-gKoJ1Chyq2Lg/viewform the recitation request form].-->
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=== 16 September 2015 ===
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====We are pleased to note ...====
-
If you wish to try out the Genesis story understanding system, you can [http://groups.csail.mit.edu/genesis/ load it] using Java's Webstart feature.
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...that Bloomberg has listed 6.034 as among [http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2015-06-11/five-of-the-best-computer-science-classes-in-the-country "Five of the Best Computer Science Classes in the U.S."]
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=== 13 September 2015 ===
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What they meant to say is that 6.034 has had outstanding TAs.  Among them is head-TA
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Jessica Noss, the 2016 winner of the EECS Carlton E.  Tucker Award for outstanding
 +
teaching as a graduate-student teaching assistant.
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We have finished assigning recitation sections based on your preferences and have sent welcome e-mails to each section. If you have not received an e-mail, or if you would like to view/switch your recitation at any time, you can visit http://ai6034.mit.edu/recitation (certificates required).
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====Road map====
-
You are welcome to attend multiple recitations if you like; in any case, we'll use your official recitation to return quizzes to you.
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To see how 6.034 outcomes relate to the outcomes of other subjects in the Course 6 curriculum, see the graphical display in the [http://6004.mit.edu/gmap/public.html?focus=6.034 6.034 Curricular Goals Map]
-
===June 2015===
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====About 6.034, Fall 2016 Edition====
<table border=1 cellspacing=0 cellpadding=10">
<table border=1 cellspacing=0 cellpadding=10">
<tr><td>
<tr><td>
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In the fall semester of 2015, 6.034 will meet Monday, Wednesday, and Friday from 10 to 11.   
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In the fall semester of 2016, 6.034 will meet Monday, Wednesday, and Friday from 10 to 11
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Most, but not all of Professor Winston's lectures will be on Monday and Wednesday.   
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in 10-250.  Most, but not all of Professor Winston's lectures will be on Monday and
-
On many, but not all Fridays, you will learn about what is happening in the field right now from someone who is doing work right now in an area related to the Monday and Wednesday lectures.
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Wednesday.  On many, but not all Fridays, you will learn about what is happening in the
 +
field right now from someone who is doing work right now in an area related to the
 +
Monday and Wednesday lectures.
Examinations will cover material from the traditional lectures as well as the right-now lectures.  It will be extremely difficult to field questions on the right-now material if you do not attend the right-now lectures because the material is not yet in textbooks or, in many cases, published papers.
Examinations will cover material from the traditional lectures as well as the right-now lectures.  It will be extremely difficult to field questions on the right-now material if you do not attend the right-now lectures because the material is not yet in textbooks or, in many cases, published papers.
Line 309: Line 183:
6.034 is no longer offered in the spring term.
6.034 is no longer offered in the spring term.
-
More details will emerge during the first lecture on Wednesday, 9 September 2014.
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More details will emerge during the first lecture on Wednesday, 7 September 2016.
 +
 
</td></tr></table>
</td></tr></table>
 +
 +
== '''What should I take after 6.034?'''==
 +
 +
<big>
 +
 +
For 6.034 alums looking for related subjects, we recommend the following, as of
 +
31 January 2016.  There may be additions through registration day.
 +
 +
<!-- ====Subjects by Right Now Lecturers, Spring====
 +
{| border=1 cellspacing=0 cellpadding=3 style="font-size:90%;"
 +
! Instructor !! Right Now Talk !! Number!! Title
 +
|-
 +
| Gerald Sussman || Propagator networks || 6.945 || Large-scale symbolic systems
 +
|-
 +
| Ed Boyden || Enlarging brain tissue || 20.309 || Biological instrumentation and software
 +
|-
 +
| Julie Shah || Getting people on the same page || 16.35 || Real time systems and software
 +
|-
 +
| Pawan Sinha et al.|| The vision of the newly sighted || 9.012 || Cognitive science
 +
|-
 +
| Patrick Winston || Understanding stories || 6.803/6.833 || The Human Intelligence Enterprise
 +
|}
 +
Note that 6.803/6.833 is a lotteried subject, oversubscribed.  See
 +
[http://courses.csail.mit.edu/6.803/index.html 6.803/6.833 home page].
 +
-->
 +
 +
<!-- ====Other subjects of note, Spring====
 +
 +
{| border=1 cellspacing=0 cellpadding=3 style="font-size:90%;"
 +
! Instructor !! Number!! Title
 +
|-
 +
| Brian Williams || 6.834J/16.412J || Cognitive Robotics
 +
|-
 +
| Barzilay-Jaakkola-Kaelbling || 6.036 ||Introduction to Machine Learning
 +
|-
 +
| Berwick and Bartel || 6.049J ||  Evolutionary Biology: Concepts, Models and Computation
 +
|}
 +
 +
6.036 could be called Computational Statistics.  It is not about perception, cognition,
 +
or action, but it is a valuable subject that everyone should take.
 +
-->
 +
 +
====Subjects of note, Fall====
 +
 +
{| border=1 cellspacing=0 cellpadding=3 style="font-size:90%;"
 +
! Instructor !!  Number!! Title
 +
|-
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| Brian Williams || 16.410J/16.413J || Principles of Autonomy and Decision Making
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|-
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| Gerald Sussman || 6.946 || Classical mechanics: a computational approach
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|-
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|}
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====Subjects associated with the Center for Brains, Minds, and Machines====
 +
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[http://cbmm.mit.edu/education/courses Many subjects] are taught, Spring and Fall, by faculty associated
 +
with the
 +
[http://cbmm.mit.edu/ Center for Brains Minds and Machines].

Revision as of 21:13, 21 October 2016

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Contents

Welcome to the 2016 Edition of 6.034

Logistical stuff:

Reference stuff:

  • Labs (also known as "problem sets")


Note that the current staff mailing list is 6.034-2016-staff at mit.edu.

News

20 October 2016: Quiz 2 thresholds

Quiz 2 will be returned in recitations on Monday and Tuesday. Beginning Wednesday, you may pick up your quiz from Professor Winston's office (32-251) when he is in, or contact your TA to arrange a pick-up. Thresholds are:

Thorough understanding (5) Acceptable understanding (4) Some understanding (3) / Needs work
Problem 1: Constraints ≥ 45 ≥ 39 ≥ 33
Problem 2: ID Trees ≥ 31 ≥ 24 ≥ 20
Problem 3: kNN ≥ 12 ≥ 9 ≥ 6
Total ≥ 88 ≥ 72 ≥ 59


Thorough understanding (5) Acceptable understanding (4) Some understanding (3) / Needs work
Spiritual and right-now ≥ 5 ≥ 4 ≥ 3

18 October 2016: Quiz 2 locations

Quiz 2 is tomorrow during class time (10 AM). If you were in Walker for the first quiz, you will be in 10-250, and vice versa. That is:

  • Family name A-L: 10-250
  • Family name M-Z: Walker, 3rd floor

30 September 2016: Right now with Professor Gerald Sussman

28 September 2016: Quiz 1 thresholds

Quiz 1 will be returned in recitations on Monday and Tuesday. Beginning Wednesday, you may pick up your quiz from Professor Winston's office (32-251) when he is in, or contact your TA to arrange a pick-up. Thresholds are:

Thorough understanding (5) Acceptable understanding (4) Some understanding (3) / Needs work
Problem 1: Search ≥ 31 ≥ 26 ≥ 21
Problem 2: Rule-Based Systems ≥ 36 ≥ 30 ≥ 26
Problem 3: Games ≥ 20 ≥ 16 ≥ 12
Total ≥ 87 ≥ 72 ≥ 59

27 September 2016: Quiz 1 locations

Quiz 1 is tomorrow during class time (10 AM). Half of you will take the quiz in Walker, half in 10-250, enabling less crowded conditions. Locations:

  • Family name A-L: Walker, 3rd floor
  • Family name M-Z: 10-250

21 September 2016: Final date announced

We have just learned that the 6.034 final will be Tuesday, 20 December 2016, 1:30 to 4:30. Conflict exam schedule will not be set until just after drop date.

19 September 2016: Lab 3 released

Lab 3 has been released. Lab 3 covers games, which will be one of the three topics on Quiz 1. In keeping with our principle of having labs due before the relevant quiz, Lab 3 will be due next Monday, September 26; Quiz 1 will follow on Wednesday, September 28.

Quiz 1 covers rule-based systems (Lab 1), search (Lab 2), and games (Lab 3).

15 September 2016: Lab 2 released; Lab 0 solution + office hours posted

Three announcements:

1. Lab 2, on basic search (yesterday's lecture) and optimal search (tomorrow's lecture), has been released. Lab 2 is due by Thusday, September 22 at 10:00pm. Labs 1 and 2 are due in the same week, so we recommend working on them in parallel. You can think of them as one longer lab, split into two separately graded sections.

2. The solution to Lab 0 is now viewable (and downloadable) online: http://web.mit.edu/6.034/www/labs/lab0_solution.py

Although we generally will not post lab solutions, we are providing this one for Lab 0 to demonstrate some useful implementation techniques that may come in handy for future labs, as well as few fun Python tricks.

3. The weekly office hour schedule for the semester is available. Room numbers will be added to the page as we receive them from the scheduling office. Throughout the semester, the page will be updated with any last-minute changes to office-hour times or locations.

14 September 2016: 3-unit add-on subject - Important announcements

A couple of announcements regarding the 3-unit add-on section taught on Fridays.

1. If you would like to get credit for it, please register on-line in the usual way (using the Registrar's link) using the subject number 6.S063.

2. We will have 2 Friday sessions, 2pm and 3pm. For people who came last time and filled in preference forms, it appears that we will have enough space so that you can attend the time you prefer, either 2 or 3 pm, without having to re-assign anyone or run a lottery. If you didn't come last week and want to sign up, you still can. Listeners are welcome.

We're still waiting for the numbers to stabilize, so for this week we will hold both the 2pm and 3pm sections in 10-250. We will most likely move to more reasonably sized rooms after this week.

12 September 2016: Lab 1 released

Lab 1, on rule-based systems, has been released. It is due by next Tuesday, September 20, at 10:00pm.

10 September 2016: Recitation assignments

...are now available via the Recitation Self-Service page (certificates required). If you have not been assigned to a section, please use the page to join one.

Summer 2016

New opportunity in 2016

The 2016 edition of 6.034 will offer an optional 3-unit add-on set of lectures given by Professor Robert C. Berwick. This addition will supplement the main lectures and recitations because it will focus on the science side of 6.034, addressing long-standing scientific questions and biological intelligence, rather than existing tools for building applications. Evolution and human language will be emphasized.

The add on is scheduled to meet on Fridays, either 2-3pm or 3-4pm, in room 36-372.

We are pleased to note ...

...that Bloomberg has listed 6.034 as among "Five of the Best Computer Science Classes in the U.S."

What they meant to say is that 6.034 has had outstanding TAs. Among them is head-TA Jessica Noss, the 2016 winner of the EECS Carlton E. Tucker Award for outstanding teaching as a graduate-student teaching assistant.

Road map

To see how 6.034 outcomes relate to the outcomes of other subjects in the Course 6 curriculum, see the graphical display in the 6.034 Curricular Goals Map

About 6.034, Fall 2016 Edition

In the fall semester of 2016, 6.034 will meet Monday, Wednesday, and Friday from 10 to 11 in 10-250. Most, but not all of Professor Winston's lectures will be on Monday and Wednesday. On many, but not all Fridays, you will learn about what is happening in the field right now from someone who is doing work right now in an area related to the Monday and Wednesday lectures.

Examinations will cover material from the traditional lectures as well as the right-now lectures. It will be extremely difficult to field questions on the right-now material if you do not attend the right-now lectures because the material is not yet in textbooks or, in many cases, published papers.

Recitations (previously known as "tutorials") will meet weekly on Monday and Tuesday. On the first day of class, you will fill out a form that will enable us to assign you to a recitation.

6.034 is no longer offered in the spring term.

More details will emerge during the first lecture on Wednesday, 7 September 2016.

What should I take after 6.034?

For 6.034 alums looking for related subjects, we recommend the following, as of 31 January 2016. There may be additions through registration day.


Subjects of note, Fall

Instructor Number Title
Brian Williams 16.410J/16.413J Principles of Autonomy and Decision Making
Gerald Sussman 6.946 Classical mechanics: a computational approach

Subjects associated with the Center for Brains, Minds, and Machines

Many subjects are taught, Spring and Fall, by faculty associated with the Center for Brains Minds and Machines.

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