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At a glance...
undergraduate programs
Computer Science and Electrical Engineering University of Maryland Baltimore County Baltimore Maryland USA http://www.cs.umbc.edu/glances/undergrad/ |
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The Department of Computer Science
and Electrical Engineering of the
University of Maryland Baltimore County consists of 28 full-time
and 32 adjunct faculty with strong research programs supported by
grants from industry and government agencies. The faculty's current
research concentrations include algorithms and computation theory,
computer networks and systems, database and knowledge management,
scientific computation, graphics and visualization, communications and
signal processing, microelectronics, photonics and optical
communications.
The Department has approximately 750 undergraduate and 210 graduate
students and enjoys considerable space, including a new (1993)
Engineering and Computer Science building with excellent laboratory
and computing environment and a separate Technology Research Center
with specialized research laboratories.
UMBC's mission if to focus on science, technology, engineering and public policy. Its suburban campus of 10,400 students is located in the Baltimore-Washington corridor, providing easy access to both metropolitan areas. Academic programs include a BS, MS and PhD in Computer Science, MS and PhD in Electrical Engineering and an undergraduate Computer Engineering track. The undergraduate CS curriculum is based upon the recommendations of the Association for Computing Machinery and offers a sound mixture of theory and practice. It specifies 46 hours of required and elective courses in computer science, 15 hours of required courses in mathematics and statistics, four hours of a required science course, and additional University requirements. Elective and independent study opportunities allow students to investigate topical areas of special interest. A Computer Engineering degree track augments the core Computer Science program with additional courses in electrical engineering, engineering principles and design. A special five year BS/MS program is available for qualified students. Academic connections exist with a number of other Departments and programs including Information Systems, Geography, Mathematics, Mechanical Engineering, Physics, Radiology (UMAB) and Visual Arts. Computing facilities for students and faculty are excellent. The department is housed in a new building devoted to engineering and computer science and maintains an extensive research computing facility that includes a large network of more than 60 UNIX workstations (SGI, Sun, and IBM), several large computer servers (SGI, Sun), and numerous other machines. The University's computing system for instructional and research use consists of UNIX-based and VAX/VMS systems and include two 20-processor SGI Challenge-XL systems, numerous SGI Crimsons, seventy-three Indigo graphic workstations, a new VAX 4000 model 500 and a Cray YMP-EL. Undergraduate research opportunities are emphasized at UMBC. You will have opportunities to work with faculty and graduate students on state of the art research projects. They include a CAIBE facility; Laboratory of Computational Photonics; a MOCVD lab; the DIODE Laser Lab; the Computer Graphics, Animation, and Visualization Lab; the Security Technology Research Group; the Maryland Center For Telecommunications Research (MCTR); the Communications and Signal Processing Lab; the Information Technology Lab; the Parallel Processing Lab; the Remote Sensing, Signal, and Image Processing Lab; the Laboratory for Information Systems Technology; and the Laboratory for Advanced Information Technology and the Distributed Adaptive Discovery and Computation Lab. UMBC's library ranks among the nation's leading university libraries in providing automated-enhanced systems. There is an integrated on-line catalog and circulation system that also provides access to the holdings at other University of Maryland libraries, the Uncover database of journal articles, and other databases. There are 550,000 monographs and bound periodicals as well as a current standing subscription order for 4,000 journals. Library patrons can request interlibrary loans from other Maryland campuses through the on-line catalog. Internship and coop experiences can be an important part of your undergraduate training in Computer Science. The nationally acclaimed Shriver Center was created to focus the programs and people of the university on solving the problems of the community. Internships, volunteer opportunities, cooperative education are available to students. Our Cooperative Education program allows students to combine periods of full or part-time, professional experience with academic study. Placements are available in Baltimore, Washington, and out-of-state. UMBC's Cooperative Education Program is nationally recognized and is the largest, most successful program in Maryland and the Engineering Co-op Program is ABET accredited. The Internship program offers students opportunities to integrate classroom knowledge with its practical applications in real-world settings. For more information contact the UMBC office of admissions or the CSEE Department.
University of Maryland Baltimore County 1000 Hilltop Circle, Baltimore MD 21250 USA Voice: (410) 455-2291 or (800) UMBC-4U2 admissions@umbc.edu http://www.umbc.edu/homepage/admissions/undergrad/ |
Tulay Adali, Assoc. Professor; PhD, North Carolina State. Adaptive signal processing, neural computation, estimation theory, and their applications in channel equalization, biomedical image analysis, optical communications, and time-series prediction. Gary M. Carter, Professor; PhD, MIT. Optoelectronics, diode lasers, nonlinear optics, coherent optical communications. Chein-I Chang, Professor; PhD, Maryland College Park. Information theory and coding, signal detection and estimation, image processing, medical imaging, remote sensing, neural networks. Richard Chang, Assoc. Professor; PhD, Cornell. Computational complexity theory, structural complexity, analysis of algorithms. Yung-Jui Chen, Professor; PhD, Pennsylvania. Integrated optics and optoelectronics, optical and electronic properties of materials, ultra-short optical pulse spectroscopy. Fow-Sen Choa, Professor; PhD, SUNY Buffalo. Semiconductor lasers, optoelectronic integrated circuits. Marie desJardins. Asst. Professor; PhD UC Berkeley; Machine learning, intelligent planning and scheduling, multiagent systems, artificial intelligence, adaptive tutoring. Tim Finin, Professor; PhD, Illinois Urbana-Champaign; Artificial intelligence, knowledge representation and reasoning, knowledge and database systems, natural language processing, intelligent agents. Anupam Joshi, Assoc. Professor; PhD, Purdue. Networked/Distributed and Mobile Computing, Data/Web Mining, Multimedia Databases, Computational Intelligence and MultiAgent Systems, Scientific Computing. Kostas Kalpakis, Assoc. Professor; PhD, Maryland. Digital libraries, electronic commerce, databases, multimedia, parallel and distributed computing, and combinatorial optimization. Hilol Kargupta. Asst. Professor; PhD Illinois Urbana-Champaign; Distributed and ubiquitous data mining, gene expression, genetic algorithms and evolutionary systems, intelligent agent based software systems, artificial intelligence, biological models of computation, optimization. Samuel Lomonaco, Professor; PhD, Princeton. Quantum computation, algebraic coding theory, cryptography, numerical and symbolic computation, analysis of algorithms, applications of topology to physics, knot theory & 3-manifolds, algebraic & differential topology, differential geometry. Curtis R. Menyuk, Professor; PhD, UCLA. Light propagation, optical fibers, nonlinear phenomena. Joel M. Morris, Professor; PhD, Johns Hopkins. Communications and signal processing, signal detection and estimation, information theory, joint time-frequency/time-scale representations and analysis techniques. Padma Mundur, Asst. Professor; PhD: George Mason University. Distributed multimedia systems, analytical resource allocation and performance modeling. Charles Nicholas, Professor; PhD, Ohio State. Electronic document processing, software engineering, and intelligent information systems. Tim Oates, Asst. Professor; PhD, UMass. Artificial intelligence, machine learning, robotics, and natural language processing. Yun Peng, Assoc. Professor; PhD, Maryland College Park. Artificial intelligence, neural network computing, and medical applications. Dhananjay Phatak Assoc. Professor; PhD, Univ of Massachusetts, Amherst, Mobile Computing and Networks, Computer Arithmetic Algoritms and VLSI Realizations, Neural Networks Theory, Implementations and Applications. John Pinkston, Professor and Chair; PhD, M.I.T.; Coding Theory, Information Security, Electronic Commerce, and Antennas. James Plusquellic, Asst. Professor; PhD, Pittsburgh. VLSI device testing, optoelectronic integrated circuits. Penny Rheingans, Asst. Professor; PhD, North Carolina, Chapel Hill. Visualization of data with potential uncertainty, multivariate visualization, dynamic interaction, computer graphics and animation, and the application of perceptual principles to computer graphics and visualization. Janet Rutledge, Adjunct Assoc. Professor;
PhD, Georgia Tech; modeling and compensating for the effects of sensorineural
hearing loss and other communication Alan T. Sherman, Assoc. Professor; PhD, MIT. Discrete algorithms, cryptology, VLSI layout algorithms. Deepinder Sidhu, Professor; PhD, SUNY Stony Brook. Computer networks, distributed systems, distributed and heterogeneous databases, parallel and distributed algorithms, computer and communication security, distributed artificial intelligence, high-performance computing. Brooke Stephens, Assoc. Professor; PhD, Maryland College Park. Numerical analysis, combinatorics, resource allocation, optimization. Andrew Veronis, Professor (Visiting), PhD, Manchester. Computer architecture, microprocessors, digital and logic design, parallel processing, digital signal processing. Li Yan, Assoc. Professor; PhD, Maryland College Park. Quantum electronics, ultrashort pulse formation, ultrafast nonlinear optics, general aspects of laser physics. Yaacov Yesha, Professor; PhD, Weizmann (Israel). Parallel computing, computational complexity, algorithms, source coding, speech and image compression. Yelena Yesha, Professor; PhD, Ohio State. Distributed systems, database systems, digital libraries, electronic commerce, performance modeling, efficient and highly fault tolerant mutual exclusion algorithms, and analytical performance models for distributed and parallel systems. Mohamed Younis, Asst. Professor; PhD, NJIT. Real-time Systems, Fault tolerant computing, Compiler-based analysis, Operating Systems, Embedded Systems. |