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This is the site for 6.034 Artificial Intelligence, Fall 2012, with Professor Patrick Winston.
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</center>
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<!--
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== '''Welcome to the 2017 Edition of 6.034'''==
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'''As a 6.034 student, you are responsible for knowing all of the policies described on this website.'''
 
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You should familiarize yourself with the [[Frequently Asked Questions | FAQs]] and [[Grading and collaboration policy | grading policy]].
 
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If you ask questions that are answered here, or complain about not knowing about policies or resources, the staff will be annoyed.
 
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-->
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===Suggestions for subjects to take in the coming spring semester, 2018===
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<big>
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<table cellpadding=5 border=1><tr><td>
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Logistical stuff:
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Bob Berwick </td><td>6.863J </td><td>Introduction to Natural Language Processing
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* [[Frequently Asked Questions | Frequently asked questions]]
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</td></tr></table>
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* [[Grading and collaboration policy]]
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* [[Tutorials | Tutorial assignments]]
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<!--
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* [[Recitations | Recitations]]
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-->
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* [[Staff | Staff email addresses]]
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<!--
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* [[Office Hours | TA office hours]]
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* [https://docs.google.com/spreadsheet/viewform?formkey=dGU5NkkzdGdsLWpITnZxQlJ6UHdDUUE6MQ Suggestion Box]
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-->
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 +
Two of our 2017 right-now speakers in Brain and Cognitive Science are offering subjects
 +
of interest in this spring semester:
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<table cellpadding=5 border=1><tr><td>
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Nancy Kanwisher </td><td>9.11 </td><td>The Human Brain</td></tr><tr><td>
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Pawan Sinha </td><td>9.60 </td><td>Machine motivated human vision 
 +
</td></tr></table>
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Reference stuff:
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Professor Kanwisher has suggested that many of you also would like 9.35:
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* [[Calendar]]
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<table cellpadding=5 border=1><tr><td>
 +
Josh McDermott </td><td>9.35 </td><td>Perceptual Systems
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</td></tr></table>
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* [[Reference material and playlist]]
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See the [http://catalog.mit.edu/subjects/9/ catelog descriptions] for more information
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<!--
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on 9.11, 9.35, and 9.60. Note that the prerequisites for these subjects are like stop
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* [[TA Notes | Notes]] on most of the primary topics
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signs in Massachusetts: merely suggestions.  We have it on good authority that the
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-->
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official prerequisites for at least 9.11 and 9.35 have been relaxed, making Course VI
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* [[Demonstrations]]
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majors welcome.
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<!--
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* [[Labs]] (also known as "problem sets")
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* [[Recitation Handouts]]
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* [http://courses.csail.mit.edu/6.034f/Examinations/ Quiz archive([[Index]])
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-->
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 +
Other great subjects offered by right-now speakers are as follows:
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<table border=1 cellspacing=0 cellpadding=10">
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<table cellpadding=5 border=1><tr><td>  
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<tr><td>
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Ed Boyden </td><td>20.309 </td><td>Biological Instrumentation and Measurement    </td></tr><tr><td>
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In the fall semester of 2012, 6.034 will meet Monday, Wednesday, and Friday from 10 to 11. 
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Nick Montfort </td><td>CMS.846 </td><td>The world made digital</td></tr><tr><td>
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Most, but not all of Professor Winston's lectures will be on Monday and Wednesday.
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        </td><td>CMS.844 </td><td>Exploratory programming for the arts and humanities </td></tr><tr></table>
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On most, 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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-
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.
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And from a right-now speaker in a previous year:
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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 tutorial.
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<table cellpadding=5 border=1><tr><td>
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Randall Davis </td><td>6.835</td><td>Intelligent Multimodal Interaction</td></tr><tr></table>
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There will be no recitations; you should ignore what the registrar has scheduled.
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And finally, a new subject of note, likely already full:
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More details will emerge during the first lecture on Wednesday, September 5.
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<table cellpadding=5 border=1><tr><td>
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</td></tr></table>  
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Hal Abelson with Natalie Lao</td><td>6.S198 </td><td>[https://www.eecs.mit.edu/academics-admissions/academic-information/subject-updates-spring-2018/6s198 Deep learning practicum]
 +
</td></tr></table>
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</big>
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Alas, two other right-now speakers, Professors Patricia Maes and Gerald Sussman, will be on sabbatical.
 +
===Logistical stuff:===
 +
* [[Frequently Asked Questions | Frequently asked questions]]
 +
* [[Grading and collaboration policy]]
 +
* [[Staff | Staff names and email addresses]]
 +
* [[Recitations | Recitations]]
 +
* [[Office Hours | Office Hours]]
 +
* [[6.S077_with_Professor_Berwick | 6.S077 with Bob Berwick]]
 +
* [[6.S966:_A_Graduate_Section_for_6.034 | 6.S966 with Gerald Sussman]]
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== News ==
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* [[Reference material and playlist | What material will be on the quiz?]]
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==== 3 September 2011 ====
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There is no Friday lecture this week.  <!--  If you have not filled out a tutorial scheduling form, fetch one from outside 32-251 and give it to Professor Winston or slide it under his door. -->
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==== Python ====
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The official language of 6.034 is Python for a variety of reasons having little to do with the strengths and weaknesses of the language.  We expect a focused weekend with any of the many Python books would be adequate preparation.  See, for example, the [http://www.amazon.com/gp/bestsellers/books/285856/ref=pd_zg_hrsr_b_1_5_last Amazon list].
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-
 
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Alternatively, you can follow one of the suggestions of Rob Speer, head 6.034 TA in 2008:
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-
 
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* [http://diveintopython.org Dive into Python] is a well-recommended book that is available online. It's written for experienced programmers who just don't know Python yet. It's meant to quickly take what you already know about other languages and explain how Python does them.
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-
 
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* At the other end of the spectrum, the text that was used in 6.00 has been expanded into one called ''Think Python''. It's [http://www.greenteapress.com/thinkpython/ online]. It is targeted at people who have not programmed much or at all.
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-
 
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* In the middle is the O'Reilly book ''Learning Python''. MIT has a subscription to O'Reilly, so anyone with an MIT IP address can read the book [http://proquest.safaribooksonline.com/9780596513986/ online].
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<!--
<!--
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* [http://goo.gl/forms/5Q6X53fNrE Suggestion Box]
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-->
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==== 28 August 2012 ====
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===Reference stuff:===
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We are considering substantial changes in the organization of the subject for this coming semester.  In particular, we are considering alternatives to traditional recitation sections and our 6.034-specific "mega recitations."  We will announce our conclusions here soon.
+
* [[Calendar]]
 +
* [[Reference material and playlist]]
 +
* [[Labs]] (also known as "problem sets")
 +
* [http://piazza.com/mit/fall2017/6034 Piazza]
 +
* '''NEW:''' [http://web.mit.edu/6.034/www/sigmoid/ Grade Calculator]
 +
* [[Demonstrations]]
 +
* [http://web.mit.edu/dxh/www/ Dylan's AI Demonstrations]
 +
<!-- * [https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLxymR0ZPfMmV-vGtvhvTeWHIcnh-bTjDI Jessica's 2016 Recitation Videos] -->
 +
* [http://courses.csail.mit.edu/6.034f/Examinations/ Quiz archive]
 +
Note that the current staff mailing list is '''6.034-2017-staff@'''.
== News ==
== News ==
-
==== Subject suggestions for Spring 2012 ====
 
-
 
-
Alas, many fewer than usual AI subjects will be offered this spring, and status of some is still unknown.  Check back here from time to time as updates will occur, potentially, up through the end of registration day.
 
-
 
-
All these are the subjects PHW would particularly mention if you were to go ask him for recommendations.
 
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6.945 Large-scale Symbolic Systems, definitely cancelled, as Professor Sussman has been called to service in MITx.
 
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6.868J The Society of Mind, waiting for information on status, as Professor Minsky taught subject already in the fall, an anomaly.
 
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9.520 [http://www.mit.edu/%7E9.520/ Statistical Learning theory], new subject, Professor Poggio et al., not for the mathematically timid.  Poggio's interests are centered on understanding biological intelligence, particularly vision.
 
-
 
-
MAS S60 [http://web.media.mit.edu/~havasi/MAS.560/ Special Topics: Practical Natural Language Processing], Dr. Havasi.
 
-
 
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6.xxx aka 6.803/6.833, [http://courses.csail.mit.edu/6.803/index.html The Human Intelligence Enterprise], PHW, lotteried, current P approximately 0.5.  Two sections, both taught by PHW, first meeting and lottery on Wednesday, 8 February, contrary to incorrect listing somewhere that the subject will meet on Monday, 6, February.
 
-
 
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And then, not exactly at the AI center of gravity, but interesting and student friendly...
 
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6.049J Evolutionary Biology: Concepts, Models and Computation, Professor Berwick.  Alas, Professor Berwick is not teaching his natural language subject this spring.  If you can't take his evolution subject, be sure to go to Tattersall's guest lecture anyway, which will be announced on this web site as soon as date is fixed.
 
-
15.668, People and Organizations, Professor Kochan, immediate past Chair of the Faculty.  All about how to be productive, and useful, in your first job by learning negotiation, leadership, and teamwork skills.  A good complement to aspects of 6.xxx, but more business oriented.
+
===December 2017===
-
==== 23 December 2011 ====
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==== Friday, December 15: End-of-semester review sessions ====
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You can examine your final in 32-251 throughout IAP.
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On Saturday (December 16) and Sunday (December 17), we will be having end-of-semester review sessions covering all 6.034 core topics. More details can be found [[Office_Hours|on the office hours page]].
-
==== 22 December 2011 ====
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==== Sunday, December 10: Quiz 4 thresholds====
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The final has been graded and will available for viewing in Professor Winston's office sometime this afternoon and on most days from now until the end of IAP. Thresholds are:
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We'll be returning Quiz 4 during recitations this week. 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. The Quiz 4 thresholds are:  
-
{| align="center" border="1"
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{| cellpadding=2 border=1 cellspacing=2
-
|
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-
|Thorough understanding
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-
|Adequate understanding
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|-
|-
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|Q1
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| ||Thorough understanding (5) ||Acceptable understanding (4)|| Some understanding (3) / Needs work
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| &ge; 90
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|-
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| &ge; 82
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| style="text-align:left;" | Problem 1: Bayes (50) || ≥ 44 || ≥ 39 || ≥ 33
|-
|-
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|Q2
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| style="text-align:left;" | Problem 2: Boosting (50) || ≥ 46 || ≥ 41 || ≥ 35
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| &ge; 88
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| &ge; 76
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|-
|-
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|Q3
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| style="text-align:left;" | '''Total''' || '''≥ 90''' || '''≥ 80''' || '''≥ 68'''
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| &ge; 85
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| &ge; 75
+
-
|-
+
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|Q4
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| &ge; 85
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| &ge; 75
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-
|-
+
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|Q5
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| &ge; 80
+
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| &ge; 68
+
|}
|}
 +
==== Friday, December 1: Quiz 4 Locations ====
-
==== 11 December 2011 ====
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Quiz 4 will take place on Wednesday, December 6. Locations will be the same as for Quiz 2. That is,
 +
* Family name A-M in Walker, 3rd floor
 +
* Family name N-Z in 10-250
-
Solutions for Quiz 4 have been posted. Also, see the Office Hours page for the times and locations of office hours during finals week.
+
The core topics are Bayesian inference and boosting (Adaboost). The spiritual/right now topics are listed as "4srn" on the [[Reference_material_and_playlist|Reference material page]].
-
==== 7 December 2011 ====
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===November 2017===
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Quiz 4 has been graded and will be return in recitations Thursday and Friday.  Thresholds are:
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==== Monday, November 20: 6.034 2017 T-shirts announced ====
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{| align="center" border="1"
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By popular request, you can now order a limited-edition 6.034 2017 T-shirt, featuring our class motto as coined by Dr. Vikash Mansinghka, former 6.034 student and Head TA.
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|
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-
|Thorough understanding
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-
|Adequate understanding
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-
|-
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|Problem 1 SVMs
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| &ge; 39
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| &ge; 34
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-
|-
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|Problem 2 Boosting
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| &ge; 41
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| &ge; 37
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-
|-
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|Problem 3 Representation
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| &ge; 8
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| &ge; 6
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-
|-
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|Overall
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| &ge; 88
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| &ge; 77
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-
|}
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-
==== 6 December 2011 ====
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This year's T-shirt will be available in sapphire blue, available at cost in both crew-neck ($8) and v-neck ($9). If you would like to buy one, [https://www.customink.com/g/fhs0-00b8-7wfk please order here] by '''Tuesday morning, November 28'''.
-
An additional set of SVM and Boosting notes have been added to the reference material page.
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==== Sunday, November 12: Quiz 3 thresholds====
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==== 16 November 2011 ====
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We hope you've had a pleasant long weekend!
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Quiz 3 has been graded and will be return in recitations Thursday and Friday. Solutions are in the Quiz archive tomorrow. Thresholds are:
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We'll be returning Quiz 3 during recitations tomorrow 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. The Quiz 3 thresholds are:  
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{| align="center" border="1"
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{| cellpadding=2 border=1 cellspacing=2
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|
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|Thorough understanding
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|Adequate understanding
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|-
|-
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|Problem 1 Nearest neighbors/Classification Trees
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| ||Thorough understanding (5) ||Acceptable understanding (4)|| Some understanding (3) / Needs work
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| &ge; 35
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|-
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| &ge; 30
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| style="text-align:left;" | Problem 1: SVMs (50) || ≥ 45 || ≥ 39 || ≥ 33
|-
|-
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|Problem 2 Neural nets
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| style="text-align:left;" | Problem 2: Neural Networks (50) || ≥ 45 || ≥ 40 || ≥ 33
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| &ge; 35
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| &ge; 29
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|-
|-
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|Problem 3 Learning
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| style="text-align:left;" | '''Total''' || '''≥ 90''' || '''≥ 79''' || '''≥ 66'''
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| &ge; 14
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| &ge; 10
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|-
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|Overall
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| &ge; 84
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| &ge; 69
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|}
|}
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==== 15 November 2011 ====
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==== Tuesday, November 7: Quiz 3 Locations ====
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36-155 is the overflow room for those who cannot be seated comfortably in 10-250 for Quiz 3 and Quiz 4.
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-
 
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==== 9 November 2011 ====
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No class Friday in observance of Veteran's Day.  Please attend Thursday recitations if possible.  In addition, Tanya will be holding extra office hours Friday afternoon (4-6pm, w20-575 Athena Cluster), so please stop by with any questions you might have.
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==== 4 November 2011 ====
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Quiz 3, covering neural networks and support vector machines, will be held during class time on November 8. You will be in the same location as you were for Quiz 1: in other words,
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[[Lab 5]] has been released.  It is due <b>*Monday*</b> November 21st at 11:59 pm.  It covers neural nets and boosting.
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* Family name A-M will be in 10-250
 +
* Family name N-Z will be in Walker, 3rd floor
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==== 28 October 2011 ====
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===October 2017===
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Quiz 2 has been graded and will be return in recitations Thursday and Friday. Solutions are in the Quiz archive. Thresholds are:
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==== Monday, October 23: Quiz 2 thresholds====
 +
We will be returning Quiz 2 during 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:  
-
{| align="center" border="1"
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{| cellpadding=2 border=1 cellspacing=2
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|
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|Thorough understanding
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|Adequate understanding
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|-
|-
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|Problem 1 Games
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| ||Thorough understanding (5) ||Acceptable understanding (4)|| Some understanding (3) / Needs work
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| &ge; 35
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|-
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| &ge; 30
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| style="text-align:left;" | Problem 1: ID Trees (30) || ≥ 27 || ≥ 24 || ≥ 19
|-
|-
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|Problem 2 Constraints
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| style="text-align:left;" | Problem 2: k-Nearest Neighbors (30) || ≥ 26 || ≥ 22 || ≥ 16
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| &ge; 35
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| &ge; 31
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|-
|-
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|Problem 3 Drawings
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| style="text-align:left;" | Problem 3: Constraint Propagation (40) || ≥ 33 || ≥ 26 || ≥ 20
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| &ge; 15
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| &ge; 10
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|-
|-
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|Overall
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| style="text-align:left;" | '''Total''' || '''≥ 86''' || '''≥ 72''' || '''≥ 55'''
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| &ge; 85
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| &ge; 71
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|}
|}
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==== 22 October 2011 ====
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====Saturday, October 14: Quiz 2 Locations====
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Lab 4 is released.  It is due November 4th.
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-
==== 13 October 2011 ====
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Quiz 2 (covering constraint propagation, k-nearest neighbors, and identification trees) will be held on October 18 at 10am. If you were in Walker for quiz 1, you will be in 10-250 for quiz 2, and vice versa. Hence,
 +
* Family name A-M will be in '''Walker, 3rd floor'''
 +
* Family name N-Z will be in '''10-250'''
-
A link to the [[Office Hours | office hours schedule]] has been added under "Logistical stuff".
+
==== Sunday, October 1: 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 ([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:
-
==== 2 October 2011 ====
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{| cellpadding=2 border=1 cellspacing=2
-
 
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Caryn Krakauer will hold office hours from 3-5pm on Thursdays in the 7th floor lobby of the Stata G tower.
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-
 
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-
==== 1 October 2011 ====
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-
 
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-
[http://ai6034.mit.edu/fall11/index.php?title=Lab_3 Lab 3] on Games search is released.  It is due the evening of Friday, October 14th at midnight.
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-
 
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-
==== 28 September 2011 ====
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-
 
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Quiz 1 has been graded and will be return in recitations Thursday and Friday.  Thresholds are:
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-
 
+
-
{| align="center" border="1"
+
-
|
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|Thorough understanding
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-
|Adequate understanding
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|-
|-
-
|Problem 1 Rules
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| ||Thorough understanding (5) ||Acceptable understanding (4)|| Some understanding (3) / Needs work
-
| &ge; 41
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|-
-
| &ge; 35
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| style="text-align:left;" | Problem 1: Search (35) || ≥ 32 || ≥ 27 || ≥ 22
|-
|-
-
|Problem 2 Search
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| style="text-align:left;" | Problem 2: Rules (35) || ≥ 31 || ≥ 27 || ≥ 21
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| &ge; 39
+
-
| &ge; 34
+
|-
|-
-
|Problem 3 Ideas
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| style="text-align:left;" | Problem 3: Games (30) || ≥ 28 || ≥ 24 || ≥ 20
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| &ge; 8
+
-
| &ge; 6
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|-
|-
-
|Overall
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| style="text-align:left;" | '''Total''' || '''≥ 91''' || '''≥ 78''' || '''≥ 63'''
-
| &ge; 88
+
-
| &ge; 75
+
|}
|}
-
==== 28 September 2011 ====
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===September 2017===
-
A notebook with translucent gray plastic cover was left in the lecture hall today. If it is your notebook, please email the TA mailing list to reclaim it.
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====Saturday, September 23: Quiz 1 Locations====
-
==== 26 September 2011 ====
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Quiz 1 (covering rule-based systems, search, and games) will be held on Wednesday, September 27 at 10am. Half of you will take the quiz in 10-250, and half in 10-250, enabling less crowded conditions. Locations:
 +
* Family name A-M: 10-250
 +
* Family name N-Z: Walker, 3rd floor
-
Free food: The VI-A Master of Engineering Thesis Program is presenting an Orientation Meeting and Student Open House followed by a Chinese Buffet on Sept. 27 starting at 5 PM in Grier Room 34-401.
+
====Sunday, September 10: Recitations are now assigned====
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This meeting is for all EECS Juniors who may be interested in having an industry based M.Eng thesis fully funded by VI-A member companies.
+
-
==== 22 September 2011 ====
+
Recitations have been assigned! To view or change your recitation, please visit the [https://ai6034.mit.edu:444/recitation/ 6.034 Recitation Self-Service page]. Recitations begin on Monday 9/11 (tomorrow) and Tuesday 9/12. We'll see you there!
-
[[Lab 2]] is released.
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====Wednesday, September 6: Recitation Sign-Up====
-
The [http://web.mit.edu/registrar/classrooms/exams/finals/2012FA_finals_by_subject.html finals schedule] has been posted by the registrar. The 6.034 final exam will be on Wednesday 21 December from 1:30-4:30pm in Johnson.
+
Recitations will start next Monday 9/11 and Tuesday 9/12. Please fill out the [https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSfVVrHiB9gj2EATvaYFx4HBH0X6gTRjoO1wn3uditphv8tdBQ/viewform recitation request form] by 5pm today to indicate your recitation preferences. Recitation assignments will be sent out by Sunday afternoon.
-
==== 20 September 2011 ====
+
If you are not yet registered for the class, please fill out the recitation request form anyway, and register for 6.034 as soon as possible.
-
Regular lecture will be given on Friday, this week, 23 September.
+
===Summer 2017===
-
Also, note that the Thursday, 1-2 recitation is beyond packed, while the Thursday and Friday 3-4 recitation numbers are relatively low.  You are free to switch to any recitation session you like; no need to ask.
+
====Special 2017 opportunity for extra units====
-
Gary will hold office hours on Friday, Sep. 23 and Monday, Sep. 26 from 5:00-6:30 PM in room 24-323.
+
The 2017 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.
-
==== 19 September 2011 ====
+
To avoid conflicts with other classes, Professor Berwick will offer the once-a-week extra session twice:
-
Tanya will hold office hours on Tuesdays from 6pm - 9pm in 34-302.  Feel free to stop by with any questions, especially about the labs or old quiz problems.
+
3-4 on Wednesdays 36-153
-
==== 14 September 2011 ====
+
2-3 on Fridays. 36-155
-
[[Lab 1]] is released.  Click on Labs link above.
+
You can attend either of the two sessions.
-
[[Tutorials | Tutorial assignments]] have been published. Please check here to ensure we have you assigned to a tutorial and that it is the one you expect.
+
If you are interested, sign up for 6.S077 in addition to 6.034.
-
==== 12 September 2011 ====
+
====Special 2017 opportunity for graduate credit====
-
[[Recitations | Recitation]] room numbers corrected.
+
The 2017 edition of 6.034 will offer an optional, experimental, graduate-credit version, for graduate students only, by Professor Gerald J. Sussman. Students involved will do all 6.034 classes, homework, and quizzes plus an extra class with Professor Sussman and extra work. [[Media:6.S966-prospectus.pdf| You can read the prospectus here.]]
-
==== 11 September 2011 ====
+
The class, 6.S966, will meet on Fridays, 11am-12noon, in 34-303.
-
Lab 0 is released. Click on Labs link above.
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If you are interested, register for 6.S966. '''When registering, you must explicitly register for 12 units'''; the registration software will try to default to 1 unit.
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==== 10 September 2011 ====
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==== 6.034 Lab 0 Released ====
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If you are on our mailing list, you have received a message with this content. Otherwise, read on.
+
Many students interested in taking 6.034 for credit wonder if their Python skills are adequate for the 6.034 laboratory assignments, especially those who have not taken 6.0001 or equivalent. The answer is to be found in Lab 0, which in past years we have released at the beginning of the semester.
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There are no 6.034 tutorials this coming week. Tutorials will start on September 19 and September 20. You will hear from your assigned TA about your tutorial time and place during the next few days.
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You can look over Lab 0 now, before the semester begins, so that you can determine if you should review Python for a day or two before the semester begins.  You can find Lab 0 [[Lab 0 | here]].  
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Ordinary recitations will start this coming week, September 15 and September 16. You should attend the recitation assigned by the registrar.
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If you have any questions, email the 6.034 staff at 6.034-2017-staff@.  
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The megarecitation, wrapped around heuristics for solving quiz problems, also start this coming week, Friday, september 16, 10 am, 10-250.
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====About 6.034, Fall 2017 Edition====
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If you are a special student, from Harvard, or in some other special category, send a message to Peter Brin (pebrin at mit dot edu) asking him to put you on our mailing list. If you are a MIT student, you will get on our list automatically the day you add the subject.
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In the fall semester of 2017, 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.
-
Non urgent news, such as quiz results, will appear only on this home page so as not to clutter up your email.
+
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.
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==== 9 September 2011 ====
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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.
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Clarification: Lectures are on Monday and Wednesday 10-11. Megarecitation is on Friday, 10-11, also in 10-250.  Per message below, no megarecitation during first week.
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6.034 is no longer offered in the spring term.
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-->
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More details will emerge during the first lecture.
 +
 
 +
'''We are pleased to note''' that Bloomberg has listed 6.034 as among [http://www.csail.mit.edu/node/2500  "Five of the Best Computer Science Classes in the U.S."]
 +
What they meant to say is that 6.034 has had outstanding TAs.

Revision as of 18:30, 6 February 2018

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Contents

Welcome to the 2017 Edition of 6.034

Suggestions for subjects to take in the coming spring semester, 2018

Bob Berwick 6.863J Introduction to Natural Language Processing

Two of our 2017 right-now speakers in Brain and Cognitive Science are offering subjects of interest in this spring semester:

Nancy Kanwisher 9.11 The Human Brain
Pawan Sinha 9.60 Machine motivated human vision

Professor Kanwisher has suggested that many of you also would like 9.35:

Josh McDermott 9.35 Perceptual Systems

See the catelog descriptions for more information on 9.11, 9.35, and 9.60. Note that the prerequisites for these subjects are like stop signs in Massachusetts: merely suggestions. We have it on good authority that the official prerequisites for at least 9.11 and 9.35 have been relaxed, making Course VI majors welcome.

Other great subjects offered by right-now speakers are as follows:

Ed Boyden 20.309 Biological Instrumentation and Measurement
Nick Montfort CMS.846 The world made digital
CMS.844 Exploratory programming for the arts and humanities

And from a right-now speaker in a previous year:

Randall Davis 6.835Intelligent Multimodal Interaction

And finally, a new subject of note, likely already full:

Hal Abelson with Natalie Lao6.S198 Deep learning practicum


Alas, two other right-now speakers, Professors Patricia Maes and Gerald Sussman, will be on sabbatical.

Logistical stuff:

Reference stuff:

Note that the current staff mailing list is 6.034-2017-staff@.

News

December 2017

Friday, December 15: End-of-semester review sessions

On Saturday (December 16) and Sunday (December 17), we will be having end-of-semester review sessions covering all 6.034 core topics. More details can be found on the office hours page.

Sunday, December 10: Quiz 4 thresholds

We'll be returning Quiz 4 during recitations this week. 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. The Quiz 4 thresholds are:

Thorough understanding (5) Acceptable understanding (4) Some understanding (3) / Needs work
Problem 1: Bayes (50) ≥ 44 ≥ 39 ≥ 33
Problem 2: Boosting (50) ≥ 46 ≥ 41 ≥ 35
Total ≥ 90 ≥ 80 ≥ 68

Friday, December 1: Quiz 4 Locations

Quiz 4 will take place on Wednesday, December 6. Locations will be the same as for Quiz 2. That is,

  • Family name A-M in Walker, 3rd floor
  • Family name N-Z in 10-250

The core topics are Bayesian inference and boosting (Adaboost). The spiritual/right now topics are listed as "4srn" on the Reference material page.

November 2017

Monday, November 20: 6.034 2017 T-shirts announced

By popular request, you can now order a limited-edition 6.034 2017 T-shirt, featuring our class motto as coined by Dr. Vikash Mansinghka, former 6.034 student and Head TA.

This year's T-shirt will be available in sapphire blue, available at cost in both crew-neck ($8) and v-neck ($9). If you would like to buy one, please order here by Tuesday morning, November 28.

Sunday, November 12: Quiz 3 thresholds

We hope you've had a pleasant long weekend!

We'll be returning Quiz 3 during recitations tomorrow 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. The Quiz 3 thresholds are:

Thorough understanding (5) Acceptable understanding (4) Some understanding (3) / Needs work
Problem 1: SVMs (50) ≥ 45 ≥ 39 ≥ 33
Problem 2: Neural Networks (50) ≥ 45 ≥ 40 ≥ 33
Total ≥ 90 ≥ 79 ≥ 66

Tuesday, November 7: Quiz 3 Locations

Quiz 3, covering neural networks and support vector machines, will be held during class time on November 8. You will be in the same location as you were for Quiz 1: in other words,

  • Family name A-M will be in 10-250
  • Family name N-Z will be in Walker, 3rd floor

October 2017

Monday, October 23: Quiz 2 thresholds

We will be returning Quiz 2 during 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: ID Trees (30) ≥ 27 ≥ 24 ≥ 19
Problem 2: k-Nearest Neighbors (30) ≥ 26 ≥ 22 ≥ 16
Problem 3: Constraint Propagation (40) ≥ 33 ≥ 26 ≥ 20
Total ≥ 86 ≥ 72 ≥ 55

Saturday, October 14: Quiz 2 Locations

Quiz 2 (covering constraint propagation, k-nearest neighbors, and identification trees) will be held on October 18 at 10am. If you were in Walker for quiz 1, you will be in 10-250 for quiz 2, and vice versa. Hence,

  • Family name A-M will be in Walker, 3rd floor
  • Family name N-Z will be in 10-250

Sunday, October 1: 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 (35) ≥ 32 ≥ 27 ≥ 22
Problem 2: Rules (35) ≥ 31 ≥ 27 ≥ 21
Problem 3: Games (30) ≥ 28 ≥ 24 ≥ 20
Total ≥ 91 ≥ 78 ≥ 63

September 2017

Saturday, September 23: Quiz 1 Locations

Quiz 1 (covering rule-based systems, search, and games) will be held on Wednesday, September 27 at 10am. Half of you will take the quiz in 10-250, and half in 10-250, enabling less crowded conditions. Locations:

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

Sunday, September 10: Recitations are now assigned

Recitations have been assigned! To view or change your recitation, please visit the 6.034 Recitation Self-Service page. Recitations begin on Monday 9/11 (tomorrow) and Tuesday 9/12. We'll see you there!

Wednesday, September 6: Recitation Sign-Up

Recitations will start next Monday 9/11 and Tuesday 9/12. Please fill out the recitation request form by 5pm today to indicate your recitation preferences. Recitation assignments will be sent out by Sunday afternoon.

If you are not yet registered for the class, please fill out the recitation request form anyway, and register for 6.034 as soon as possible.

Summer 2017

Special 2017 opportunity for extra units

The 2017 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.

To avoid conflicts with other classes, Professor Berwick will offer the once-a-week extra session twice:

3-4 on Wednesdays 36-153

2-3 on Fridays. 36-155

You can attend either of the two sessions.

If you are interested, sign up for 6.S077 in addition to 6.034.

Special 2017 opportunity for graduate credit

The 2017 edition of 6.034 will offer an optional, experimental, graduate-credit version, for graduate students only, by Professor Gerald J. Sussman. Students involved will do all 6.034 classes, homework, and quizzes plus an extra class with Professor Sussman and extra work. You can read the prospectus here.

The class, 6.S966, will meet on Fridays, 11am-12noon, in 34-303.

If you are interested, register for 6.S966. When registering, you must explicitly register for 12 units; the registration software will try to default to 1 unit.

6.034 Lab 0 Released

Many students interested in taking 6.034 for credit wonder if their Python skills are adequate for the 6.034 laboratory assignments, especially those who have not taken 6.0001 or equivalent. The answer is to be found in Lab 0, which in past years we have released at the beginning of the semester.

You can look over Lab 0 now, before the semester begins, so that you can determine if you should review Python for a day or two before the semester begins. You can find Lab 0 here.

If you have any questions, email the 6.034 staff at 6.034-2017-staff@.

About 6.034, Fall 2017 Edition

In the fall semester of 2017, 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.

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.

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