CSCI 4530/6530 - Spring 2010
Advanced Computer Graphics
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Final Project
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Academic Integrity

Grading

Your grade in this course will be determined as follows:
  • 40% Homework Assignments
  • 30% Final Project
  • 15% Participation
  • 15% Quizzes

There will be 5 homework assignments. Homework 0 is smaller and worth fewer points than the other four homeworks. You will have 2 weeks to complete Homeworks 1-4, so be sure to manage your time effectively.

For the final project you will select your own topic. It can be an extension of one of the homework assignments, a portion of your graduate research, a significant module of a final project for another course, or a brand-new project. You are highly encouraged to work in a team of 2 for the final project. Individual projects or teams of 3 must have advance approval from the instructor. The project should include a significant programming component. You will share your results through an in-class presentation to your peers and a publication-quality writeup (e.g., motivation, related work, algorithm/technique, results, conclusions, and bibliography). Graduate students are expected to complete a more extensive project and are required to format their project report for submission to an appropriate graphics-related conference or journal (e.g., SIGGRAPH, Symposium on Computer Animation, Symposium on Geometry Processing, Eurographics Symposium on Rendering, Graphics Interface, etc.)

Participation is a very important component of the course. You are expected to regularly attend lecture, ask questions, and join in the discussion. Each student will lead the discussion of one research paper during the semester.

We will have 2 in-class quizzes covering the lecture material.

Assigned Readings

All students are expected to have downloaded and read the assigned paper for that day's lecture. It's "ok" if you don't understand all of the details. Each student should submit at least one relevant question or comment (to the corresponding discussion on Rensselaer LMS) about the assigned paper by 10am on the day the paper will be discussed in class.

The student who will lead the discussion should spend some extra time to understand the details of the paper. During lecture this student will give an oral summary (~ 5 minutes) of the paper's contributions, and then lead the class in a discussion of the paper, beginning with the comments posted to the forum.