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Artificial Intelligence: Structures and Strategies for Complex
Problem Solving
by George F. Luger 5th edition, 2005.
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| Assignments | 40% |
| Midterm exam 1 | 20% |
| Midterm exam 2 | 20% |
| Final exam | 20% |
The final grade will be calculated using a sliding scale using the percentages above.
If copying, plagiarism, or unauthorized collaboration is suspected, the case will be turned to the Dean of Students' office with supporting evidence. After this, the decision is made by the Dean. The procedure is explained in the MTU Academic Integrity Policy (this is required reading!). More tips and information can be found at the Dean of Students' page. The "Featured Links" on that page include a link to a 12 minute video presentation called "Academic Integrity at Michigan Tech - What Students Need to Know." Note that we have a departmental policy of reporting the suspected cases to the Department Chair's office.
You are expected to use common sense and the general outlines in the Academic Integrity Policy to make decisions. Some points specific to this course are:
If you need help:
Come to see me during my office hour, send your question over e-mail, or send me an e-mail message to set up an appointment. Do not hesitate to ask questions about the basics too. Try to do this early though. While I make every effort to answer last-minute questions, I might not be able to check my messages in the evening or over the weekend.
You may ask your friends in the class for clarification, and work over the material I supply together. You are not allowed to look at their answers or programs.
If someone asks you to help on an assignment:
You may answer clarification questions and general questions about the concepts. You are not allowed to show them your work.
If you use any other textbook or anything from the web:
You may use it by clearly acknowledging the source and its contribution to your work. For instance, "I found a program at http://www.xxx.yyy and built my program on top of it."
You will be assigned both programming and paper-pencil homeworks. While discussion with others is permitted and encouraged, the final work should be done individually. The programs, comments, and answers must be the original work of the author.
All the assigments should be handed-in at or before the beginning of class on the due date. Late submissions are not accepted unless you notify me in advance with a reasonable excuse. Even so, late submissions may lose points in order to maintain fairness of grading.
I expect legible program source and documents---free of wrapped lines and neatly organized.
There will be no make-up exams. In the case of very unusual circumstances (e.g., death in the family, severe illness with doctor's written note), please come to see me and we can work something out.
As with the assignments, it is your responsibility to return legible answers. Unfortunately, I do not have the resources to decipher bad handwriting and might have to assume that no answer was given.
Collaboration or dishonesty during the exams is not acceptable and will be reported to the Dean of Students' office (please see the "Academic Integrity" section above).
I assume that you can read Lisp programs and you can program well using Java or C++.
If you think you have gaps in your background, please come and see me.
