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CS 1U: Practical Unix

A practical introduction to using the Unix operating system with a focus on Linux command line skills. Class will consist of video tutorials and weekly hands-on lab sections. The time listed on AXESS is for the first week's logistical meeting only. Topics include: grep and regular expressions, ZSH, Vim and Emacs, basic and advanced GDB features, permissions, working with the file system, revision control, Unix utilities, environment customization, and using Python for shell scripts. Topics may be added, given sufficient interest. Course website: http://cs1u.stanford.edu
Terms: Aut, Spr | Units: 1

CS 2C: Introduction to Media Production

Sound, image and video editing techniques and applications, including understanding file formats and publishing multimedia online. Topics include GarageBand, Photoshop, iMovie, and production best practices. Weekly lecture followed by lab section. Second unit for additional creative production assignments completed outside of class time and Final Project with group. Not a programming course, but will use computer multimedia applications heavily for editing.
Terms: Aut, Win, Spr | Units: 1-2
Instructors: ; Scott, E. (PI)

CS 42: Callback Me Maybe: Contemporary Javascript

Introduction to the JavaScript programming language with a focus on building contemporary applications. Course consists of in-class activities and programming assignments that challenge students to create functional web apps (e.g. Yelp, Piazza, Instagram). Topics include syntax/semantics, event-based programming, document object model (DOM), application programming interfaces (APIs), asynchronous JavaScript and XML (AJAX), jQuery, Node.js, and MongoDB. Prerequisite: CS 107.
Terms: Aut, Spr | Units: 2

CS 81N: Hackers and Heroes

This course is about dreamers, role models, and the spirit of adventure. Hackers are said to be the soul of computing: playful programmers who think progress is best made by trial and error, guided by the "hacker ethic." Another view has hackers as nettlesome troublemakers -- "computer bums" at best, or maybe just plain criminals. In this class, you'll decide, by interviewing real hackers about their exploits and learning how to do your own hacks. We'll study major moments in the fifty-year history of hacking and read from texts including Steven Levy's "Hackers," John Markoff's "What the Dormouse Said," Andy Hertzfeld's "Revolution in The Valley," and Peter Seibel's "Coders at Work."
Terms: Spr | Units: 3
Instructors: ; Winstein, K. (PI)

CS 91SI: Digital Canvas: Intro to Visual Design on the Web

Introduction to visual design concepts with a focus on modern interfaces like web, mobile and app. Topics include visual design elements and principles such as color theory, layout and composition, typography, and aspects of communication. Students will analyze existing designs, and use various technical tools to implement their own designs. This course consists of a series of in-class activities, design projects, peer critique sessions, and guest speakers. Recommended prerequisites: some web programming experience. Application required.
Terms: Aut, Spr | Units: 2

CS 101: Introduction to Computing Principles

Introduces the essential ideas of computing: data representation, algorithms, programming "code", computer hardware, networking, security, and social issues. Students learn how computers work and what they can do through hands-on exercises. In particular, students will see the capabilities and weaknesses of computer systems so they are not mysterious or intimidating. Course features many small programming exercises, although no prior programming experience is assumed or required. CS101 is not a complete programming course such as CS106A. CS101 is effectively an alternative to CS105. A laptop computer is recommended for the in-class exercises.
Terms: Spr | Units: 3-5 | UG Reqs: GER:DB-EngrAppSci
Instructors: ; Parlante, N. (PI)

CS 103: Mathematical Foundations of Computing

Mathematical foundations required for computer science, including propositional predicate logic, induction, sets, functions, and relations. Formal language theory, including regular expressions, grammars, finite automata, Turing machines, and NP-completeness. Mathematical rigor, proof techniques, and applications. Prerequisite: 106A or equivalent.
Terms: Aut, Win, Spr | Units: 3-5 | UG Reqs: GER:DB-Math, WAY-FR

CS 106A: Programming Methodology (ENGR 70A)

Introduction to the engineering of computer applications emphasizing modern software engineering principles: object-oriented design, decomposition, encapsulation, abstraction, and testing. Uses the Java programming language. Emphasis is on good programming style and the built-in facilities of the Java language. No prior programming experience required. Summer quarter enrollment is limited. Priority given to Stanford students.
Terms: Aut, Win, Spr, Sum | Units: 3-5 | UG Reqs: GER:DB-EngrAppSci, WAY-FR

CS 106B: Programming Abstractions (ENGR 70B)

Abstraction and its relation to programming. Software engineering principles of data abstraction and modularity. Object-oriented programming, fundamental data structures (such as stacks, queues, sets) and data-directed design. Recursion and recursive data structures (linked lists, trees, graphs). Introduction to time and space complexity analysis. Uses the programming language C++ covering its basic facilities. Prerequisite: 106A or equivalent. Summer quarter enrollment is limited. Priority given to Stanford students.
Terms: Aut, Win, Spr, Sum | Units: 3-5 | UG Reqs: GER:DB-EngrAppSci, WAY-FR

CS 106L: Standard C++ Programming Laboratory

Supplemental lab to 106B and 106X. Additional features of standard C++ programming practice. Possible topics include advanced C++ language features, standard libraries, STL containers and algorithms, object memory management, operator overloading, and inheritance. Prerequisite: consent of instructor. Corequisite: 106B or 106X.
Terms: Aut, Spr | Units: 1

CS 107: Computer Organization and Systems

Introduction to the fundamental concepts of computer systems. Explores how computer systems execute programs and manipulate data, working from the C programming language down to the microprocessor. Topics covered include: the C programming language, data representation, machine-level code, computer arithmetic, elements of code compilation, memory organization and management, and performance evaluation and optimization. Prerequisites: 106B or X, or consent of instructor.
Terms: Aut, Win, Spr | Units: 3-5 | UG Reqs: GER:DB-EngrAppSci, WAY-FR

CS 109: Introduction to Probability for Computer Scientists

Topics include: counting and combinatorics, random variables, conditional probability, independence, distributions, expectation, point estimation, and limit theorems. Applications of probability in computer science including machine learning and the use of probability in the analysis of algorithms. Prerequisites: 103, 106B or X, multivariate calculus at the level of MATH 51 or CME 100 or equivalent.
Terms: Aut, Win, Spr, Sum | Units: 3-5 | UG Reqs: GER:DB-EngrAppSci, WAY-AQR, WAY-FR

CS 109L: Statistical Computing with R Laboratory

Supplemental lab to CS109. Introduces the R programming language for statistical computing. Topics include basic facilities of R including mathematical, graphical, and probability functions, building simulations, introductory data fitting and machine learning. Provides exposure to the functional programming paradigm. Corequisite: CS109.
Terms: Aut, Spr | Units: 1
Instructors: ; Lee, C. (PI); Shin, K. (PI)

CS 110: Principles of Computer Systems

Principles and practice of engineering of computer software and hardware systems. Topics include: techniques for controlling complexity; strong modularity using client-server design, virtual memory, and threads; networks; atomicity and coordination of parallel activities; security, and encryption; and performance optimizations. Prerequisite: 107.
Terms: Aut, Win, Spr | Units: 3-5 | UG Reqs: GER:DB-EngrAppSci
Instructors: ; Cain, J. (PI)

CS 143: Compilers

Principles and practices for design and implementation of compilers and interpreters. Topics: lexical analysis; parsing theory; symbol tables; type systems; scope; semantic analysis; intermediate representations; runtime environments; code generation; and basic program analysis and optimization. Students construct a compiler for a simple object-oriented language during course programming projects. Prerequisites: 103 or 103B, and 107.
Terms: Spr | Units: 3-4 | UG Reqs: GER:DB-EngrAppSci
Instructors: ; Dill, D. (PI)

CS 155: Computer and Network Security (EE 287A)

For seniors and first-year graduate students. Principles of computer systems security. Attack techniques and how to defend against them. Topics include: network attacks and defenses, operating system security, application security (web, apps, databases), malware, privacy, and security for mobile devices. Course projects focus on building reliable code. Prerequisite: 110. Recommended: basic Unix.
Terms: Spr | Units: 3 | UG Reqs: GER:DB-EngrAppSci

CS 161: Design and Analysis of Algorithms

Worst and average case analysis. Recurrences and asymptotics. Efficient algorithms for sorting, searching, and selection. Data structures: binary search trees, heaps, hash tables. Algorithm design techniques: divide-and-conquer, dynamic programming, greedy algorithms, amortized analysis, randomization. Algorithms for fundamental graph problems: minimum-cost spanning tree, connected components, topological sort, and shortest paths. Possible additional topics: network flow, string searching. Prerequisite: 103 or 103B; 109 or STATS 116.
Terms: Aut, Spr, Sum | Units: 3-5 | UG Reqs: GER:DB-EngrAppSci, WAY-FR

CS 168: The Modern Algorithmic Toolbox

This course will provide a rigorous and hands-on introduction to the central ideas and algorithms that constitute the core of the modern algorithmsntoolkit. Emphasis will be on understanding the high-level theoretical intuitions and principles underlying the algorithms we discuss, as well asndeveloping a concrete understanding of when and how to implement and apply the algorithms. The course will be structured as a sequence of one-week investigations; each week will introduce one algorithmic idea, and discuss the motivation, theoretical underpinning, and practical applications of that algorithmic idea. Each topic will be accompanied by a mini-project in which students will be guided through a practical application of the ideas of the week. Topics include hashing, dimension reduction and LSH, boosting, linear programming, gradient descent, sampling, and basic data representation and coding. Prerequisites: CS107 and CS161, or permission from the instructor.
Terms: Spr | Units: 3-4

CS 170: Stanford Laptop Orchestra: Composition, Coding, and Performance (MUSIC 128)

Classroom instantiation of the Stanford Laptop Orchestra (SLOrk) which includes public performances. An ensemble of more than 20 humans, laptops, controllers, and special speaker arrays designed to provide each computer-mediated instrument with its sonic identity and presence. Topics and activities include issues of composing for laptop orchestras, instrument design, sound synthesis, programming, and live performance. May be repeated four times for credit.
Terms: Spr | Units: 1-5 | UG Reqs: WAY-CE | Repeatable 4 times (up to 20 units total)
Instructors: ; Wang, G. (PI)

CS 181: Computers, Ethics, and Public Policy

(Formerly 201.) Primarily for majors entering computer-related fields. Ethical and social issues related to the development and use of computer technology. Ethical theory, and social, political, and legal considerations. Scenarios in problem areas: privacy, reliability and risks of complex systems, and responsibility of professionals for applications and consequences of their work. Prerequisite: 106B or X.
Terms: Aut, Win, Spr | Units: 4 | UG Reqs: GER:EC-EthicReas, WAY-ER

CS 181W: Computers, Ethics, and Public Policy (WIM)

Writing-intensive version of CS181. Satisfies the WIM requirement for Computer Science and Computer Systems Engineering undergraduates.
Terms: Aut, Win, Spr | Units: 4 | UG Reqs: GER:EC-EthicReas, WAY-ER

CS 190: Software Design Studio

This course will teach the art of software design: how to decompose large complex systems into classes that can be implemented and maintained easily. Topics include information hiding, thick classes, API design, managing complexity, and how to write in-code documentation. The class will involve significant system software implementation and will use an iterative approach consisting of implementation, review, and revision. The course will be taught in a studio format with in-class discussions and code reviews in addition to lectures. Prerequisites: CS 140.
Terms: Spr | Units: 3
Instructors: ; Ousterhout, J. (PI)

CS 191: Senior Project

Restricted to Computer Science and Computer Systems Engineering students. Group or individual projects under faculty direction. Register using instructor's section number. A project can be either a significant software application or publishable research. Software application projects include substantial programming and modern user-interface technologies and are comparable in scale to shareware programs or commercial applications. Research projects may result in a paper publishable in an academic journal or presentable at a conference. Required public presentation of final application or research results.
Terms: Aut, Win, Spr, Sum | Units: 1-6 | Repeatable for credit
Instructors: ; Aiken, A. (PI); Akeley, K. (PI); Altman, R. (PI); Angst, R. (PI); Baker, M. (PI); Barbagli, F. (PI); Batzoglou, S. (PI); Bejerano, G. (PI); Bernstein, M. (PI); Blikstein, P. (PI); Boneh, D. (PI); Boyd, S. (PI); Bradski, G. (PI); Brafman, R. (PI); Cain, J. (PI); Cao, P. (PI); Casado, M. (PI); Cheriton, D. (PI); Cooper, S. (PI); Dally, B. (PI); De-Micheli, G. (PI); Dill, D. (PI); Dror, R. (PI); Dwork, C. (PI); Engler, D. (PI); Ermon, S. (PI); Fedkiw, R. (PI); Feigenbaum, E. (PI); Fikes, R. (PI); Fisher, K. (PI); Fogg, B. (PI); Fox, A. (PI); Garcia-Molina, H. (PI); Genesereth, M. (PI); Gill, J. (PI); Girod, B. (PI); Goel, A. (PI); Golub, G. (PI); Goodman, N. (PI); Guibas, L. (PI); Hanrahan, P. (PI); Heer, J. (PI); Hennessy, J. (PI); Horowitz, M. (PI); Johari, R. (PI); Johnson, M. (PI); Jurafsky, D. (PI); Katti, S. (PI); Kay, M. (PI); Khatib, O. (PI); Klemmer, S. (PI); Koller, D. (PI); Koltun, V. (PI); Konolige, K. (PI); Kozyrakis, C. (PI); Kundaje, A. (PI); Lam, M. (PI); Landay, J. (PI); Latombe, J. (PI); Leskovec, J. (PI); Levis, P. (PI); Levitt, M. (PI); Levoy, M. (PI); Li, F. (PI); Liang, P. (PI); Manna, Z. (PI); Manning, C. (PI); Mazieres, D. (PI); McCarthy, J. (PI); McCluskey, E. (PI); McKeown, N. (PI); Meng, T. (PI); Mitchell, J. (PI); Montanari, A. (PI); Motwani, R. (PI); Musen, M. (PI); Nass, C. (PI); Nayak, P. (PI); Ng, A. (PI); Nilsson, N. (PI); Olukotun, O. (PI); Ousterhout, J. (PI); Paepcke, A. (PI); Pande, V. (PI); Parlante, N. (PI); Pea, R. (PI); Plotkin, S. (PI); Plummer, R. (PI); Prabhakar, B. (PI); Pratt, V. (PI); Raghavan, P. (PI); Rajaraman, A. (PI); Re, C. (PI); Roberts, E. (PI); Rosenblum, M. (PI); Roughgarden, T. (PI); Sahami, M. (PI); Salisbury, J. (PI); Savarese, S. (PI); Saxena, A. (PI); Schwarz, K. (PI); Shoham, Y. (PI); Stepp, M. (PI); Thrun, S. (PI); Tobagi, F. (PI); Trevisan, L. (PI); Ullman, J. (PI); Valiant, G. (PI); Van Roy, B. (PI); Wang, G. (PI); Widom, J. (PI); Wiederhold, G. (PI); Williams, R. (PI); Williams, V. (PI); Winograd, T. (PI); Winstein, K. (PI); Young, P. (PI); Zelenski, J. (PI); George, S. (GP); Hadding, D. (GP); Hartung, C. (GP); Magness, S. (GP); Siroker, M. (GP); Swenson, M. (GP)

CS 191W: Writing Intensive Senior Project (WIM)

Restricted to Computer Science and Computer Systems Engineering students. Writing-intensive version of CS191. Register using the section number of an Academic Council member.
Terms: Aut, Win, Spr | Units: 3-6 | Repeatable for credit
Instructors: ; Aiken, A. (PI); Akeley, K. (PI); Altman, R. (PI); Baker, M. (PI); Barbagli, F. (PI); Batzoglou, S. (PI); Bejerano, G. (PI); Bernstein, M. (PI); Blikstein, P. (PI); Boneh, D. (PI); Boyd, S. (PI); Bradski, G. (PI); Brafman, R. (PI); Cain, J. (PI); Cao, P. (PI); Casado, M. (PI); Cheriton, D. (PI); Cooper, S. (PI); Dally, B. (PI); De-Micheli, G. (PI); Dill, D. (PI); Dror, R. (PI); Dwork, C. (PI); Engler, D. (PI); Ermon, S. (PI); Fedkiw, R. (PI); Feigenbaum, E. (PI); Fikes, R. (PI); Fisher, K. (PI); Fogg, B. (PI); Fox, A. (PI); Garcia-Molina, H. (PI); Genesereth, M. (PI); Gill, J. (PI); Girod, B. (PI); Goel, A. (PI); Golub, G. (PI); Goodman, N. (PI); Guibas, L. (PI); Hanrahan, P. (PI); Heer, J. (PI); Hennessy, J. (PI); Horowitz, M. (PI); Johari, R. (PI); Johnson, M. (PI); Jurafsky, D. (PI); Katti, S. (PI); Kay, M. (PI); Khatib, O. (PI); Klemmer, S. (PI); Koller, D. (PI); Koltun, V. (PI); Konolige, K. (PI); Kozyrakis, C. (PI); Kundaje, A. (PI); Lam, M. (PI); Landay, J. (PI); Latombe, J. (PI); Leskovec, J. (PI); Levis, P. (PI); Levitt, M. (PI); Levoy, M. (PI); Li, F. (PI); Liang, P. (PI); Manna, Z. (PI); Manning, C. (PI); Mazieres, D. (PI); McCarthy, J. (PI); McCluskey, E. (PI); McKeown, N. (PI); Meng, T. (PI); Mitchell, J. (PI); Motwani, R. (PI); Musen, M. (PI); Nass, C. (PI); Nayak, P. (PI); Ng, A. (PI); Nilsson, N. (PI); Olukotun, O. (PI); Ousterhout, J. (PI); Paepcke, A. (PI); Pande, V. (PI); Parlante, N. (PI); Pea, R. (PI); Plotkin, S. (PI); Plummer, R. (PI); Prabhakar, B. (PI); Pratt, V. (PI); Raghavan, P. (PI); Rajaraman, A. (PI); Re, C. (PI); Roberts, E. (PI); Rosenblum, M. (PI); Roughgarden, T. (PI); Sahami, M. (PI); Salisbury, J. (PI); Savarese, S. (PI); Saxena, A. (PI); Schwarz, K. (PI); Shoham, Y. (PI); Thrun, S. (PI); Tobagi, F. (PI); Trevisan, L. (PI); Ullman, J. (PI); Valiant, G. (PI); Van Roy, B. (PI); Wang, G. (PI); Widom, J. (PI); Wiederhold, G. (PI); Williams, R. (PI); Winograd, T. (PI); Winstein, K. (PI); Young, P. (PI); Zelenski, J. (PI); George, S. (GP); Hadding, D. (GP); Hartung, C. (GP); Magness, S. (GP); Siroker, M. (GP); Swenson, M. (GP)

CS 192: Programming Service Project

Restricted to Computer Science students. Appropriate academic credit (without financial support) is given for volunteer computer programming work of public benefit and educational value.
Terms: Aut, Win, Spr, Sum | Units: 1-4 | Repeatable for credit
Instructors: ; Aiken, A. (PI); Altman, R. (PI); Baker, M. (PI); Barbagli, F. (PI); Batzoglou, S. (PI); Bejerano, G. (PI); Bernstein, M. (PI); Boneh, D. (PI); Bradski, G. (PI); Brafman, R. (PI); Cain, J. (PI); Cao, P. (PI); Cheriton, D. (PI); Cooper, S. (PI); Dally, B. (PI); De-Micheli, G. (PI); Dill, D. (PI); Dwork, C. (PI); Engler, D. (PI); Fedkiw, R. (PI); Feigenbaum, E. (PI); Fikes, R. (PI); Fisher, K. (PI); Fogg, B. (PI); Fox, A. (PI); Garcia-Molina, H. (PI); Genesereth, M. (PI); Gill, J. (PI); Girod, B. (PI); Goel, A. (PI); Golub, G. (PI); Guibas, L. (PI); Hanrahan, P. (PI); Heer, J. (PI); Hennessy, J. (PI); Horowitz, M. (PI); Johari, R. (PI); Johnson, M. (PI); Jurafsky, D. (PI); Katti, S. (PI); Kay, M. (PI); Khatib, O. (PI); Klemmer, S. (PI); Koller, D. (PI); Koltun, V. (PI); Konolige, K. (PI); Kozyrakis, C. (PI); Lam, M. (PI); Latombe, J. (PI); Leskovec, J. (PI); Levis, P. (PI); Levitt, M. (PI); Levoy, M. (PI); Li, F. (PI); Manna, Z. (PI); Manning, C. (PI); Mazieres, D. (PI); McCarthy, J. (PI); McCluskey, E. (PI); McKeown, N. (PI); Meng, T. (PI); Mitchell, J. (PI); Motwani, R. (PI); Musen, M. (PI); Nass, C. (PI); Nayak, P. (PI); Ng, A. (PI); Nilsson, N. (PI); Olukotun, O. (PI); Ousterhout, J. (PI); Parlante, N. (PI); Plotkin, S. (PI); Plummer, R. (PI); Prabhakar, B. (PI); Pratt, V. (PI); Raghavan, P. (PI); Rajaraman, A. (PI); Roberts, E. (PI); Rosenblum, M. (PI); Roughgarden, T. (PI); Sahami, M. (PI); Salisbury, J. (PI); Schwarz, K. (PI); Shoham, Y. (PI); Thrun, S. (PI); Tobagi, F. (PI); Trevisan, L. (PI); Ullman, J. (PI); Van Roy, B. (PI); Widom, J. (PI); Wiederhold, G. (PI); Williams, R. (PI); Winograd, T. (PI); Young, P. (PI); Zelenski, J. (PI); George, S. (GP); Hadding, D. (GP); Hartung, C. (GP); Siroker, M. (GP); Swenson, M. (GP)

CS 193W: Apple Watch Programming

The technologies behind building Apple Watch applications. Student teams will build an Apple Watch application and containing iPhone application with supervision of the instructor. Students must have access to a Macintosh computer. iPhone and Apple Watch are not required, but recommended. Prerequisite: CS193P.
Terms: Spr | Units: 2
Instructors: ; Kassoff, M. (PI)

CS 194: Software Project

Design, specification, coding, and testing of a significant team programming project under faculty supervision. Documentation includes a detailed proposal. Public demonstration of the project at the end of the quarter. Prerequisites: CS 110 and CS 161.
Terms: Win, Spr | Units: 3 | Repeatable for credit

CS 194W: Software Project (WIM)

Restricted to Computer Science, Computer Systems Engineering, and Electrical Engineering undergraduates. Writing-intensive version of CS194.
Terms: Win, Spr | Units: 3

CS 196: Computer Consulting

Focus is on Macintosh and Windows operating system maintenance and troubleshooting through hardware and software foundation and concepts. Topics include operating systems, networking, security, troubleshooting methodology with emphasis on Stanford's computing environment. Not a programming course. Prerequisite: 1C or equivalent.
Terms: Win, Spr | Units: 2
Instructors: ; Smith, S. (PI)

CS 198: Teaching Computer Science

Students lead a discussion section of 106A while learning how to teach a programming language at the introductory level. Focus is on teaching skills, techniques, and course specifics. Application and interview required; see http://cs198.stanford.edu.
Terms: Aut, Win, Spr | Units: 3-4

CS 199: Independent Work

Special study under faculty direction, usually leading to a written report. Letter grade; if not appropriate, enroll in 199P.
Terms: Aut, Win, Spr, Sum | Units: 1-6 | Repeatable for credit
Instructors: ; Aiken, A. (PI); Akeley, K. (PI); Altman, R. (PI); Baker, M. (PI); Barbagli, F. (PI); Batzoglou, S. (PI); Bejerano, G. (PI); Bernstein, M. (PI); Blikstein, P. (PI); Boneh, D. (PI); Boyd, S. (PI); Bradski, G. (PI); Brafman, R. (PI); Cain, J. (PI); Cao, P. (PI); Casado, M. (PI); Cheriton, D. (PI); Cooper, S. (PI); Dally, B. (PI); De-Micheli, G. (PI); Dill, D. (PI); Dror, R. (PI); Dwork, C. (PI); Engler, D. (PI); Ermon, S. (PI); Fedkiw, R. (PI); Feigenbaum, E. (PI); Fikes, R. (PI); Fisher, K. (PI); Fogg, B. (PI); Fox, A. (PI); Garcia-Molina, H. (PI); Genesereth, M. (PI); Gill, J. (PI); Girod, B. (PI); Goel, A. (PI); Golub, G. (PI); Goodman, N. (PI); Guibas, L. (PI); Hanrahan, P. (PI); Heer, J. (PI); Hennessy, J. (PI); Horowitz, M. (PI); Johari, R. (PI); Johnson, M. (PI); Jurafsky, D. (PI); Katti, S. (PI); Kay, M. (PI); Khatib, O. (PI); Klemmer, S. (PI); Koller, D. (PI); Koltun, V. (PI); Konolige, K. (PI); Kozyrakis, C. (PI); Lam, M. (PI); Landay, J. (PI); Latombe, J. (PI); Lee, C. (PI); Leskovec, J. (PI); Levis, P. (PI); Levitt, M. (PI); Levoy, M. (PI); Li, F. (PI); Liang, P. (PI); Manna, Z. (PI); Manning, C. (PI); Mazieres, D. (PI); McCarthy, J. (PI); McCluskey, E. (PI); McKeown, N. (PI); Meng, T. (PI); Mitchell, J. (PI); Mitra, S. (PI); Motwani, R. (PI); Musen, M. (PI); Nass, C. (PI); Nayak, P. (PI); Ng, A. (PI); Nilsson, N. (PI); Olukotun, O. (PI); Ousterhout, J. (PI); Paepcke, A. (PI); Pande, V. (PI); Parlante, N. (PI); Pea, R. (PI); Plotkin, S. (PI); Plummer, R. (PI); Prabhakar, B. (PI); Pratt, V. (PI); Raghavan, P. (PI); Rajaraman, A. (PI); Re, C. (PI); Roberts, E. (PI); Rosenblum, M. (PI); Roughgarden, T. (PI); Sahami, M. (PI); Salisbury, J. (PI); Savarese, S. (PI); Saxena, A. (PI); Schwarz, K. (PI); Shoham, Y. (PI); Stepp, M. (PI); Thrun, S. (PI); Tobagi, F. (PI); Trevisan, L. (PI); Ullman, J. (PI); Valiant, G. (PI); Van Roy, B. (PI); Widom, J. (PI); Wiederhold, G. (PI); Williams, R. (PI); Williams, V. (PI); Winograd, T. (PI); Winstein, K. (PI); Young, P. (PI); Zelenski, J. (PI); George, S. (GP); Hadding, D. (GP); Hartung, C. (GP); Siroker, M. (GP); Swenson, M. (GP)

CS 199P: Independent Work

(Staff)
Terms: Aut, Win, Spr, Sum | Units: 1-6 | Repeatable for credit
Instructors: ; Aiken, A. (PI); Altman, R. (PI); Angst, R. (PI); Baker, M. (PI); Batzoglou, S. (PI); Bejerano, G. (PI); Bernstein, M. (PI); Blikstein, P. (PI); Boneh, D. (PI); Bradski, G. (PI); Brafman, R. (PI); Cain, J. (PI); Cao, P. (PI); Cheriton, D. (PI); Dally, B. (PI); De-Micheli, G. (PI); Dill, D. (PI); Dror, R. (PI); Dwork, C. (PI); Engler, D. (PI); Fedkiw, R. (PI); Feigenbaum, E. (PI); Fikes, R. (PI); Fisher, K. (PI); Fogg, B. (PI); Fox, A. (PI); Garcia-Molina, H. (PI); Genesereth, M. (PI); Gill, J. (PI); Girod, B. (PI); Goel, A. (PI); Golub, G. (PI); Goodman, N. (PI); Guibas, L. (PI); Hanrahan, P. (PI); Hennessy, J. (PI); Horowitz, M. (PI); Johari, R. (PI); Johnson, M. (PI); Jurafsky, D. (PI); Katti, S. (PI); Kay, M. (PI); Khatib, O. (PI); Klemmer, S. (PI); Koller, D. (PI); Koltun, V. (PI); Konolige, K. (PI); Kozyrakis, C. (PI); Lam, M. (PI); Landay, J. (PI); Latombe, J. (PI); Lee, C. (PI); Leskovec, J. (PI); Levis, P. (PI); Levitt, M. (PI); Levoy, M. (PI); Li, F. (PI); Liang, P. (PI); Manna, Z. (PI); Manning, C. (PI); Mazieres, D. (PI); McCarthy, J. (PI); McCluskey, E. (PI); McKeown, N. (PI); Meng, T. (PI); Mitchell, J. (PI); Mitra, S. (PI); Motwani, R. (PI); Musen, M. (PI); Nass, C. (PI); Nayak, P. (PI); Ng, A. (PI); Nilsson, N. (PI); Olukotun, O. (PI); Ousterhout, J. (PI); Parlante, N. (PI); Plotkin, S. (PI); Plummer, R. (PI); Prabhakar, B. (PI); Pratt, V. (PI); Raghavan, P. (PI); Rajaraman, A. (PI); Re, C. (PI); Roberts, E. (PI); Rosenblum, M. (PI); Roughgarden, T. (PI); Sahami, M. (PI); Salisbury, J. (PI); Savarese, S. (PI); Saxena, A. (PI); Schwarz, K. (PI); Shoham, Y. (PI); Stepp, M. (PI); Thrun, S. (PI); Tobagi, F. (PI); Trevisan, L. (PI); Ullman, J. (PI); Valiant, G. (PI); Van Roy, B. (PI); Widom, J. (PI); Wiederhold, G. (PI); Williams, R. (PI); Williams, V. (PI); Winograd, T. (PI); Winstein, K. (PI); Young, P. (PI); Zelenski, J. (PI); George, S. (GP); Hadding, D. (GP); Hartung, C. (GP); Siroker, M. (GP); Swenson, M. (GP)

CS 204: Legal Informatics

Legal informatics based on representation of regulations in computable form. Encoding regulations facilitate creation of legal information systems with significant practical value. Convergence of technological trends, growth of the Internet, advent of semantic web technology, and progress in computational logic make computational law prospects better. Topics: current state of computational law, prospects and problems, philosophical and legal implications. This course is *Cross* listed with LAW 729. Prerequisite: basic concepts of programming.
Terms: Spr | Units: 3

CS 205A: Mathematical Methods for Robotics, Vision, and Graphics

Continuous mathematics background necessary for research in robotics, vision, and graphics. Possible topics: linear algebra; the conjugate gradient method; ordinary and partial differential equations; vector and tensor calculus. Prerequisites: 106B or X; MATH 51; or equivalents.
Terms: Spr | Units: 3
Instructors: ; Solomon, J. (PI)

CS 210B: Software Project Experience with Corporate Partners

Continuation of CS210A. Focus is on real-world software development. Corporate partners seed projects with loosely defined challenges from their R&D labs; students innovate to build their own compelling software solutions. Student teams are treated as start-up companies with a budget and a technical advisory board comprised of the instructional staff and corporate liaisons. Teams will typically travel to the corporate headquarters of their collaborating partner, meaning some teams will travel internationally. Open loft classroom format such as found in Silicon Valley software companies. Exposure to: current practices in software engineering; techniques for stimulating innovation; significant development experience with creative freedoms; working in groups; real world software engineering challenges; public presentation of technical work; creating written descriptions of technical work. Prerequisites: CS 210A
Terms: Spr | Units: 3-4
Instructors: ; Borenstein, J. (PI)

CS 210L: Introducing Software through Video Stories

In this one-unit lab where coding meets film, software development teams from CS210 are paired with film students. This resulting cross-disciplinary group will create a short video that tells an engaging and creative story about the software developed by the team in CS210. The class will introduce students to principles of short form narrative storytelling and the visual language of film, as well as cover the technical principles of DSLR cinematography and non-linear editing. This course will offer students the experience of creating a film in partnership with a producing team.
Terms: Spr | Units: 1
Instructors: ; Borenstein, J. (PI)

CS 211: Content Creation in Virtual Reality

Students are immersed in a cutting edge virtual reality development environment consisting of both hardware and software elements. Studentsnwill progress from configuring a comprehensive development environment to designing and implementing networked content in VR. The deep development focus is overlaid with a discussion series with leaders in the VR space to provide both breadth and depth to a student¿s understanding of the VR space. Prerequisites: CS 107 or equivalent. A strong software development background is required that includes comfort with C++. Design experience a plus.
Terms: Spr | Units: 3-4
Instructors: ; Borenstein, J. (PI)

CS 224D: Deep Learning for Natural Language Processing

Deep learning approaches have obtained very high performance across many different natural language processing tasks. In this class, students will learn to understand, implement, train, debug, visualize and potentially invent their own neural network models for a variety of language understanding tasks. The course provides a deep excursion from early models to cutting-edge research. Applications will range across a broad spectrum: from simple tasks like part of speech tagging, over sentiment analysis to question answering and machine translation. The final project will involve implementing a complex neural network model and applying it to a large scale NLP problem. Prerequisites: programming abilities (python), linear algebra, Math 21 or equivalent, machine learning background (CS 229 or similar) Recommended: machine learning (CS 229, CS 228), CS 224N, EE364a (convex optimization), CS 231N
| Units: 3-4
Instructors: ; Socher, R. (PI)

CS 224U: Natural Language Understanding (LINGUIST 188, LINGUIST 288)

Project-oriented class focused on developing systems and algorithms for robust machine understanding of human language. Draws on theoretical concepts from linguistics, natural language processing, and machine learning. Topics include lexical semantics, distributed representations of meaning, relation extraction, semantic parsing, sentiment analysis, and dialogue agents, with special lectures on developing projects, presenting research results, and making connections with industry. Prerequisites: one of LINGUIST 180, CS 124, CS 224N, CS224S, or CS221; and logical/semantics such as LINGUIST 130A or B, CS 157, or PHIL150
Terms: Spr | Units: 3-4

CS 225A: Experimental Robotics

Hands-on laboratory course experience in robotic manipulation. Topics include robot kinematics, dynamics, control, compliance, sensor-based collision avoidance, and human-robot interfaces. Second half of class is devoted to final projects using various robotic platforms to build and demonstrate new robot task capabilities. Previous projects include the development of autonomous robot behaviors of drawing, painting, playing air hocket, yoyo, basketball, ping-pong or xylophone. Prerequisites: 223A or equivalent.
Terms: Aut, Spr | Units: 3
Instructors: ; Khatib, O. (PI); Choi, I. (GP)

CS 227B: General Game Playing

A general game playing system accepts a formal description of a game to play it without human intervention or algorithms designed for specific games. Hands-on introduction to these systems and artificial intelligence techniques such as knowledge representation, reasoning, learning, and rational behavior. Students create GGP systems to compete with each other and in external competitions. Prerequisite: programming experience. Recommended: 103 or equivalent.
Terms: Spr | Units: 3
Instructors: ; Genesereth, M. (PI)

CS 231B: The Cutting Edge of Computer Vision

(Formerly 223C) More than one-third of the brain is engaged in visual processing, the most sophisticated human sensory system. Yet visual recognition technology has fundamentally influenced our lives on the same scale and scope as text-based technology has, thanks to Google, Twitter, Facebook, etc. This course is designed for those students who are interested in cutting edge computer vision research, and/or are aspiring to be an entrepreneur using vision technology. Course will guide students through the design and implementation of three core vision technologies: segmentation, detection and classification on three highly practical, real-world problems. Course will focus on teaching the fundamental theory, detailed algorithms, practical engineering insights, and guide them to develop state-of-the-art systems evaluated based on the most modern and standard benchmark datasets. Prerequisites: CS2223B or equivalent and a good machine learning background (i.e. CS221, CS228, CS229). Fluency in Matlab and C/C++.
Terms: Spr | Units: 3
Instructors: ; Li, F. (PI); Krause, J. (GP)

CS 231M: Mobile Computer Vision

The course surveys recent developments in computer vision, graphics and image processing for mobile application. Topics of interest include: feature extraction, image enhancement and digital photography, 3D scene understanding and modeling, virtual augmentation, object recognition and categorization, human activity recognition. As part of this course, students will familiarize with a state-of-the-art mobile hardware and software development platform: an NVIDIA Tegra-based Android tablet, with relevant libraries such as OpenCV and FCam. Tablets will be available for each student team. Prerequisites: Knowledge of linear algebra, probability, as well as concepts introduced in either CS131A or CS231A and CS232 (or equivalent) are necessary for understanding the material covered in this class. C++ (or Java) programming experience is expected.
Terms: Spr | Units: 3-4

CS 232: Digital Image Processing (EE 368)

Image sampling and quantization color, point operations, segmentation, morphological image processing, linear image filtering and correlation, image transforms, eigenimages, multiresolution image processing, noise reduction and restoration, feature extraction and recognition tasks, image registration. Emphasis is on the general principles of image processing. Students learn to apply material by implementing and investigating image processing algorithms in Matlab and optionally on Android mobile devices. Term project. Recommended: EE261, EE278.
Terms: Spr | Units: 3

CS 240: Advanced Topics in Operating Systems

Recent research. Classic and new papers. Topics: virtual memory management, synchronization and communication, file systems, protection and security, operating system extension techniques, fault tolerance, and the history and experience of systems programming. Prerequisite: 140 or equivalent.
Terms: Spr | Units: 3 | Repeatable for credit
Instructors: ; Engler, D. (PI)

CS 244: Advanced Topics in Networking (EE 284B)

Classic papers, new ideas, and research papers in networking. Architectural principles: naming, addressing, routing; congestion control, traffic management, QoS; wireless and mobility; overlay networks and virtualization; network security; switching and routing; content distribution; and proposals for future Internet structures. Prerequisite: 144 or equivalent.
Terms: Spr | Units: 3-4

CS 244E: Networked Wireless Systems (EE 384E)

Design and implementation of wireless networks and mobile systems. The course will commence with a short retrospective of wireless communication and initially touch on some of the fundamental physical layer properties of various wireless communication technologies. The focus will then shift to design of media access control and routing layers for various wireless systems. The course will also examine adaptations necessary at transport and higher layers to cope with node mobility and error-prone nature of the wireless medium. Finally, it will conclude with a brief overview of other related issues including emerging wireless/mobile applications. Prerequisites: EE 284
Terms: Spr | Units: 3

CS 254: Computational Complexity

An introduction to computational complexity theory. Topics include the P versus NP problem; diagonalization; space complexity: PSPACE, Savitch's theorem, and NL=coNL; counting problems and #P-completeness; circuit complexity; pseudorandomness and derandomization; complexity of approximation; quantum computing; complexity barriers. Prerequisites: 154 or equivalent; mathematical maturity.
Terms: Spr | Units: 3
Instructors: ; Williams, R. (PI)

CS 261: Optimization and Algorithmic Paradigms

Algorithms for network optimization: max-flow, min-cost flow, matching, assignment, and min-cut problems. Introduction to linear programming. Use of LP duality for design and analysis of algorithms. Approximation algorithms for NP-complete problems such as Steiner Trees, Traveling Salesman, and scheduling problems. Randomized algorithms. Introduction to online algorithms. Prerequisite: 161 or equivalent.
Terms: Spr | Units: 3
Instructors: ; Roughgarden, T. (PI)

CS 263: Algorithms for Modern Data Models (MS&E 317)

We traditionally think of algorithms as running on data available in a single location, typically main memory. In many modern applications including web analytics, search and data mining, computational biology, finance, and scientific computing, the data is often too large to reside in a single location, is arriving incrementally over time, is noisy/uncertain, or all of the above. Paradigms such as map-reduce, streaming, sketching, Distributed Hash Tables, Bulk Synchronous Processing, and random walks have proved useful for these applications. This course will provide an introduction to the design and analysis of algorithms for these modern data models. Prerequisite: Algorithms at the level of CS 261.
Terms: Spr | Units: 3
Instructors: ; Goel, A. (PI)

CS 272: Introduction to Biomedical Informatics Research Methodology (BIOE 212, BIOMEDIN 212, GENE 212)

Hands-on software building. Student teams conceive, design, specify, implement, evaluate, and report on a software project in the domain of biomedicine. Creating written proposals, peer review, providing status reports, and preparing final reports. Guest lectures from professional biomedical informatics systems builders on issues related to the process of project management. Software engineering basics. Because the team projects start in the first week of class, attendance that week is strongly recommended. Prerequisites: BIOMEDIN 210 or 211 or 214 or 217 or consent of instructor.
Terms: Spr | Units: 3
Instructors: ; Altman, R. (PI)

CS 275B: Music Query, Analysis, and Style Simulation (MUSIC 254)

Leveraging off three synchronized sets of symbolic data resources for notation and analysis, the lab portion introduces students to the open-source Humdrum Toolkit for music representation and analysis. Issues of data content and quality as well as methods of information retrieval, visualization, and summarization are considered in class. Grading based primarily on student projects. Prerequisite: 253 or consent of instructor.
Terms: Spr | Units: 2-4

CS 276: Information Retrieval and Web Search (LINGUIST 286)

Text information retrieval systems; efficient text indexing; Boolean, vector space, and probabilistic retrieval models; ranking and rank aggregation; evaluating IR systems. Text clustering and classification: classification algorithms, latent semantic indexing, taxonomy induction; Web search engines including crawling and indexing, link-based algorithms, and web metadata. Prerequisites: CS 107, CS 109, CS 161.
Terms: Spr | Units: 3

CS 294S: Research Project in Software Systems and Security

Topics vary. Focus is on emerging research themes such as programmable open mobile Internet that spans multiple system topics such as human-computer interaction, programming systems, operating systems, networking, and security. May be repeated for credit. Prerequisites: CS 103 and 107.
Terms: Spr | Units: 3 | Repeatable for credit
Instructors: ; Lam, M. (PI)

CS 294W: Writing Intensive Research Project in Computer Science

Restricted to Computer Science and Computer Systems Engineering undergraduates. Students enroll in the CS 294W section attached to the CS 294 project they have chosen.
Terms: Spr | Units: 3
Instructors: ; Lam, M. (PI)

CS 323: Automated Reasoning: Theory and Applications

Intelligent computer agents must reason about complex, uncertain, and dynamic environments. This course is a graduate level introduction to automated reasoning techniques and their applications, covering logical and probabilistic approaches. Topics include: logical and probabilistic foundations, backtracking strategies and algorithms behind modern SAT solvers, stochastic local search and Markov Chain Monte Carlo algorithms, variational techniques, classes of reasoning tasks and reductions, and applications.
Terms: Spr | Units: 3-4
Instructors: ; Ermon, S. (PI)

CS 327A: Advanced Robotic Manipulation

Advanced control methodologies and novel design techniques for complex human-like robotic and bio mechanical systems. Class covers the fundamentals in operational space dynamics and control, elastic planning, human motion synthesis. Topics include redundancy, inertial properties, haptics, simulation, robot cooperation, mobile manipulation, human-friendly robot design, humanoids and whole-body control. Additional topcs in emerging areas are presented by groups of students at the end-of-quarter mini-symposium. Prerequisites: 223A or equivalent.
Terms: Spr | Units: 3

CS 341: Project in Mining Massive Data Sets

Team project in data-mining of very large-scale data, including the problem statement and implementation and evaluation of a solution; some lectures on relevant materials will be given: Hadoop, Hive, Amazon EC2; other topics of possible relevance to some projects: computational advertising and the adwords problem; graph partitioning and community detection; extracting relations from the Web; stream data processing.
Terms: Spr | Units: 3

CS 346: Database System Implementation

A major database system implementation project realizes the principles and techniques covered in earlier courses. Students independently build a complete database management system, from file structures through query processing, with a personally designed feature or extension. Lectures on project details and advanced techniques in database system implementation, focusing on query processing and optimization. Guest speakers from industry on commercial DBMS implementation techniques. Prerequisites: 145, 245, programming experience in C++.
Terms: Spr | Units: 3-5
Instructors: ; Re, C. (PI)

CS 347: Parallel and Distributed Data Management

The principles and system organization of distributed and parallel databases. Data fragmentation and distribution, distributed database design, query processing and optimization, distributed concurrency control, reliability and commit protocols, and replicated data management. Data management in peer-to-peer systems. Data management in the "cloud" using map-reduce and other massive parallelism techniques.
| Units: 3
Instructors: ; Cooper, B. (PI)

CS 348B: Computer Graphics: Image Synthesis Techniques

Intermediate level, emphasizing high-quality image synthesis algorithms and systems issues in rendering. Topics include: Reyes and advanced rasterization, including motion blur and depth of field; ray tracing and physically based rendering; Monte Carlo algorithms for rendering, including direct illumination and global illumination; path tracing and photon mapping; surface reflection and light source models; volume rendering and subsurface scattering; SIMD and multi-core parallelism for rendering. Written assignments and programming projects. Prerequisite: 248 or equivalent. Recommended: Fourier analysis or digital signal processing.
Terms: Spr | Units: 3-4
Instructors: ; Hanrahan, P. (PI)

CS 371: Computational Biology in Four Dimensions (BIOMEDIN 371, BIOPHYS 371, CME 371)

Computational approaches to understanding the three-dimensional spatial organization of biological systems and how that organization evolves over time. The course will cover cutting-edge research in both physics-based simulation and computational analysis of experimental data, at scales ranging from individual molecules to entire cells. Prerequisite: CS 106A or equivalent, and an introductory course in biology or biochemistry. Recommended: some experience in mathematical modeling (does not need to be a formal course).
Terms: Spr | Units: 3

CS 373: Statistical and Machine Learning Methods for Genomics (BIO 268, BIOMEDIN 245, GENE 245, STATS 345)

Introduction to statistical and computational methods for genomics. Sample topics include: expectation maximization, hidden Markov model, Markov chain Monte Carlo, ensemble learning, probabilistic graphical models, kernel methods and other modern machine learning paradigms. Rationales and techniques illustrated with existing implementations used in population genetics, disease association, and functional regulatory genomics studies. Instruction includes lectures and discussion of readings from primary literature. Homework and projects require implementing some of the algorithms and using existing toolkits for analysis of genomic datasets.
Terms: Spr | Units: 3

CS 374: Algorithms in Biology (BIOMEDIN 374)

Algorithms and computational models applied to molecular biology and genetics. Topics vary annually. Possible topics include biological sequence comparison, annotation of genes and other functional elements, molecular evolution, genome rearrangements, microarrays and gene regulation, protein folding and classification, molecular docking, RNA secondary structure, DNA computing, and self-assembly. May be repeated for credit. Prerequisites: 161, 262 or 274, or BIOCHEM 218, or equivalents.
Terms: Spr | Units: 2-3
Instructors: ; Batzoglou, S. (PI)

CS 376: Human-Computer Interaction Research

Prepares students to conduct original HCI research by reading and discussing seminal and cutting-edge research papers. Main topics are ubiquitous computing, social computing, and design and creation; breadth topics include HCI methods, programming, visualization, and user modeling. Student pairs perform a quarter-long research project. Prerequisites: For CS and Symbolic Systems undergraduates/masters students, CS 147 or CS 247.No prerequisite for PhD students or students outside of CS and Symbolic Systems.
Terms: Spr | Units: 3-4 | Repeatable for credit
Instructors: ; Bernstein, M. (PI)

CS 377D: Topics in Learning and Technology: d.compress - Designing Calm (EDUC 328A)

Contents of the course change each year. The course can be repeated. Stress silently but steadily damages physical and emotional well-being, relationships, productivity, and our ability to learn and remember. This highly experiential and project-oriented class will focus on designing interactive technologies to enable calm states of cognition, emotion, and physiology for better human health, learning, creativity and productivity.
Terms: Spr | Units: 3 | Repeatable 6 times (up to 18 units total)
Instructors: ; Moraveji, N. (PI)

CS 377E: Designing Solutions to Global Grand Challenges

In this course we will creatively apply information technologies to collectively attack Global Grand Challenges (e.g., global warming, rising healthcare costs and declining access, and ensuring quality education for all). Interdisciplinary student teams will carry out needfinding within a target domain, followed by brainstorming to propose a quarter long project. Teams will spend the rest of the quarter applying user-centered design methods to rapidly iterate through design, prototyping, and testing of their solutions. This course will interleave a weekly lecture with a weekly studio session where students apply the techniques hands-on in a small-scale, supportive environment.
Terms: Spr | Units: 3-4
Instructors: ; Landay, J. (PI)

CS 379C: Computational Models of the Neocortex

Reprisal of course offered spring 2012 of the same name ; see http://www.stanford.edu/class/cs379c/ for more detail ; which emphasized scaling the technologies of systems neuroscience to take advantage of the exponential trend in computational power known as Moore's Law. Course covers many of the same topics but will focus on the near-term prospects for practical advances in health care, prosthetic augmentation, and artificial intelligence inspired by biological systems. Graded pass / no credit on the basis of class participation, a midterm white paper or business prospectus and a final technical report evaluating an appropriate technology selected in collaboration with the instructor. Focus will be on examining the assumptions underlying current claims for realizing the potential benefits of research in neuroscience and identifying real business opportunities, disruptive new technologies and advances in medicine that could substantially benefit patients within the next decade. Technology-minded critical thinkers seriously interested in placing their bets and picking careers in related areas of business, technology and science are welcome. Prerequisites: basic probability theory, algorithms, and statistics.
Terms: Spr | Units: 3
Instructors: ; Dean, T. (PI)

CS 390A: Curricular Practical Training

Educational opportunities in high technology research and development labs in the computing industry. Qualified computer science students engage in internship work and integrate that work into their academic program. Students register during the quarter they are employed and complete a research report outlining their work activity, problems investigated, results, and follow-on projects they expect to perform. 390 A, B, and C may each be taken once.
Terms: Aut, Win, Spr, Sum | Units: 1
Instructors: ; Aiken, A. (PI); Akeley, K. (PI); Altman, R. (PI); Baker, M. (PI); Barbagli, F. (PI); Batzoglou, S. (PI); Bejerano, G. (PI); Bernstein, M. (PI); Blikstein, P. (PI); Boneh, D. (PI); Boyd, S. (PI); Bradski, G. (PI); Brafman, R. (PI); Cain, J. (PI); Cao, P. (PI); Casado, M. (PI); Cheriton, D. (PI); Cooper, S. (PI); Dally, B. (PI); De-Micheli, G. (PI); Dill, D. (PI); Dwork, C. (PI); Engler, D. (PI); Fedkiw, R. (PI); Feigenbaum, E. (PI); Fikes, R. (PI); Fischer, M. (PI); Fisher, K. (PI); Fogg, B. (PI); Fox, A. (PI); Garcia-Molina, H. (PI); Genesereth, M. (PI); Gill, J. (PI); Girod, B. (PI); Goel, A. (PI); Golub, G. (PI); Goodman, N. (PI); Guibas, L. (PI); Hanrahan, P. (PI); Heer, J. (PI); Hennessy, J. (PI); Horowitz, M. (PI); Johari, R. (PI); Johnson, M. (PI); Jurafsky, D. (PI); Katti, S. (PI); Kay, M. (PI); Khatib, O. (PI); Klemmer, S. (PI); Koller, D. (PI); Koltun, V. (PI); Konolige, K. (PI); Kozyrakis, C. (PI); Lam, M. (PI); Landay, J. (PI); Latombe, J. (PI); Lee, C. (PI); Leskovec, J. (PI); Levis, P. (PI); Levitt, M. (PI); Levoy, M. (PI); Li, F. (PI); Liang, P. (PI); Manna, Z. (PI); Manning, C. (PI); Mazieres, D. (PI); McCarthy, J. (PI); McCluskey, E. (PI); McKeown, N. (PI); Meng, T. (PI); Mitchell, J. (PI); Mitra, S. (PI); Motwani, R. (PI); Musen, M. (PI); Nass, C. (PI); Nayak, P. (PI); Ng, A. (PI); Nilsson, N. (PI); Olukotun, O. (PI); Ousterhout, J. (PI); Paepcke, A. (PI); Pande, V. (PI); Parlante, N. (PI); Pea, R. (PI); Plotkin, S. (PI); Plummer, R. (PI); Prabhakar, B. (PI); Pratt, V. (PI); Raghavan, P. (PI); Rajaraman, A. (PI); Re, C. (PI); Roberts, E. (PI); Rosenblum, M. (PI); Roughgarden, T. (PI); Sahami, M. (PI); Salisbury, J. (PI); Schwarz, K. (PI); Shoham, Y. (PI); Sosic, R. (PI); Stepp, M. (PI); Thrun, S. (PI); Tobagi, F. (PI); Trevisan, L. (PI); Ullman, J. (PI); Valiant, G. (PI); Van Roy, B. (PI); Widom, J. (PI); Wiederhold, G. (PI); Williams, R. (PI); Williams, V. (PI); Winograd, T. (PI); Winstein, K. (PI); Young, P. (PI); Zelenski, J. (PI); George, S. (GP); Hadding, D. (GP); Hartung, C. (GP); Siroker, M. (GP); Swenson, M. (GP)

CS 390B: Curricular Practical Training

Educational opportunities in high technology research and development labs in the computing industry. Qualified computer science students engage in internship work and integrate that work into their academic program. Students register during the quarter they are employed and complete a research report outlining their work activity, problems investigated, results, and follow-on projects they expect to perform. 390A,B,C may each be taken once.
Terms: Aut, Win, Spr, Sum | Units: 1
Instructors: ; Aiken, A. (PI); Akeley, K. (PI); Altman, R. (PI); Baker, M. (PI); Barbagli, F. (PI); Batzoglou, S. (PI); Bejerano, G. (PI); Bernstein, M. (PI); Blikstein, P. (PI); Boneh, D. (PI); Bradski, G. (PI); Brafman, R. (PI); Cain, J. (PI); Cao, P. (PI); Casado, M. (PI); Cheriton, D. (PI); Cooper, S. (PI); Dally, B. (PI); De-Micheli, G. (PI); Dill, D. (PI); Dwork, C. (PI); Engler, D. (PI); Fedkiw, R. (PI); Feigenbaum, E. (PI); Fikes, R. (PI); Fisher, K. (PI); Fogg, B. (PI); Fox, A. (PI); Garcia-Molina, H. (PI); Genesereth, M. (PI); Gill, J. (PI); Girod, B. (PI); Goel, A. (PI); Golub, G. (PI); Guibas, L. (PI); Hanrahan, P. (PI); Heer, J. (PI); Hennessy, J. (PI); Horowitz, M. (PI); Johari, R. (PI); Johnson, M. (PI); Jurafsky, D. (PI); Katti, S. (PI); Kay, M. (PI); Khatib, O. (PI); Klemmer, S. (PI); Koller, D. (PI); Koltun, V. (PI); Konolige, K. (PI); Kozyrakis, C. (PI); Lam, M. (PI); Latombe, J. (PI); Leskovec, J. (PI); Levis, P. (PI); Levitt, M. (PI); Levoy, M. (PI); Li, F. (PI); Liang, P. (PI); Manna, Z. (PI); Manning, C. (PI); Mazieres, D. (PI); McCarthy, J. (PI); McCluskey, E. (PI); McKeown, N. (PI); Meng, T. (PI); Mitchell, J. (PI); Mitra, S. (PI); Motwani, R. (PI); Musen, M. (PI); Nass, C. (PI); Nayak, P. (PI); Ng, A. (PI); Nilsson, N. (PI); Olukotun, O. (PI); Ousterhout, J. (PI); Paepcke, A. (PI); Parlante, N. (PI); Pea, R. (PI); Plotkin, S. (PI); Plummer, R. (PI); Prabhakar, B. (PI); Pratt, V. (PI); Raghavan, P. (PI); Rajaraman, A. (PI); Roberts, E. (PI); Rosenblum, M. (PI); Roughgarden, T. (PI); Sahami, M. (PI); Salisbury, J. (PI); Schwarz, K. (PI); Shoham, Y. (PI); Thrun, S. (PI); Tobagi, F. (PI); Trevisan, L. (PI); Ullman, J. (PI); Valiant, G. (PI); Van Roy, B. (PI); Widom, J. (PI); Wiederhold, G. (PI); Williams, R. (PI); Winograd, T. (PI); Young, P. (PI); Zelenski, J. (PI); George, S. (GP); Hadding, D. (GP); Hartung, C. (GP); Siroker, M. (GP); Swenson, M. (GP)

CS 390C: Curricular Practical Training

Educational opportunities in high technology research and development labs in the computing industry. Qualified computer science students engage in internship work and integrate that work into their academic program. Students register during the quarter they are employed and complete a research report outlining their work activity, problems investigated, results, and follow-on projects they expect to perform. 390A,B,C may each be taken once.
Terms: Aut, Win, Spr, Sum | Units: 1
Instructors: ; Aiken, A. (PI); Akeley, K. (PI); Altman, R. (PI); Baker, M. (PI); Barbagli, F. (PI); Batzoglou, S. (PI); Bejerano, G. (PI); Bernstein, M. (PI); Blikstein, P. (PI); Boneh, D. (PI); Bradski, G. (PI); Brafman, R. (PI); Cain, J. (PI); Cao, P. (PI); Casado, M. (PI); Cheriton, D. (PI); Cooper, S. (PI); Dally, B. (PI); De-Micheli, G. (PI); Dill, D. (PI); Dwork, C. (PI); Engler, D. (PI); Fedkiw, R. (PI); Feigenbaum, E. (PI); Fikes, R. (PI); Fisher, K. (PI); Fogg, B. (PI); Fox, A. (PI); Garcia-Molina, H. (PI); Genesereth, M. (PI); Gill, J. (PI); Girod, B. (PI); Goel, A. (PI); Golub, G. (PI); Goodman, N. (PI); Guibas, L. (PI); Hanrahan, P. (PI); Heer, J. (PI); Hennessy, J. (PI); Horowitz, M. (PI); Johari, R. (PI); Johnson, M. (PI); Jurafsky, D. (PI); Katti, S. (PI); Kay, M. (PI); Khatib, O. (PI); Klemmer, S. (PI); Koller, D. (PI); Koltun, V. (PI); Konolige, K. (PI); Kozyrakis, C. (PI); Lam, M. (PI); Latombe, J. (PI); Leskovec, J. (PI); Levis, P. (PI); Levitt, M. (PI); Levoy, M. (PI); Li, F. (PI); Liang, P. (PI); Manna, Z. (PI); Manning, C. (PI); Mazieres, D. (PI); McCarthy, J. (PI); McCluskey, E. (PI); McKeown, N. (PI); Meng, T. (PI); Mitchell, J. (PI); Mitra, S. (PI); Motwani, R. (PI); Musen, M. (PI); Nass, C. (PI); Nayak, P. (PI); Ng, A. (PI); Nilsson, N. (PI); Olukotun, O. (PI); Ousterhout, J. (PI); Paepcke, A. (PI); Parlante, N. (PI); Pea, R. (PI); Plotkin, S. (PI); Plummer, R. (PI); Prabhakar, B. (PI); Pratt, V. (PI); Raghavan, P. (PI); Rajaraman, A. (PI); Roberts, E. (PI); Rosenblum, M. (PI); Roughgarden, T. (PI); Sahami, M. (PI); Salisbury, J. (PI); Schwarz, K. (PI); Shoham, Y. (PI); Thrun, S. (PI); Tobagi, F. (PI); Trevisan, L. (PI); Ullman, J. (PI); Valiant, G. (PI); Van Roy, B. (PI); Widom, J. (PI); Wiederhold, G. (PI); Williams, R. (PI); Winograd, T. (PI); Young, P. (PI); Zelenski, J. (PI); George, S. (GP); Hadding, D. (GP); Hartung, C. (GP); Siroker, M. (GP); Swenson, M. (GP)

CS 390P: Part-time Curricular Practical Training

For qualified computer science PhD students only. Permission number required for enrollment; see the CS PhD program administrator in Gates room 196. May be taken just once; not repeatable. Educational opportunities in high technology research and development labs in the computing industry. Qualified computer science students engage in research and integrate that work into their academic program. Students register during the quarter they are employed and complete a research report outlining their work activity, problems investigated, results, and follow-on projects they expect to perform. Students on F1 visas should be aware that completing 12 or more months of full-time CPT will make them ineligible for Optional Practical Training (OPT).
Terms: Aut, Win, Spr | Units: 1
Instructors: ; Aiken, A. (PI); Akeley, K. (PI); Altman, R. (PI); Baker, M. (PI); Barbagli, F. (PI); Batzoglou, S. (PI); Bejerano, G. (PI); Bernstein, M. (PI); Blikstein, P. (PI); Boneh, D. (PI); Boyd, S. (PI); Bradski, G. (PI); Brafman, R. (PI); Cain, J. (PI); Cao, P. (PI); Casado, M. (PI); Cheriton, D. (PI); Cooper, S. (PI); Dally, B. (PI); De-Micheli, G. (PI); Dill, D. (PI); Dror, R. (PI); Dwork, C. (PI); Engler, D. (PI); Fedkiw, R. (PI); Feigenbaum, E. (PI); Fikes, R. (PI); Fisher, K. (PI); Fogg, B. (PI); Fox, A. (PI); Garcia-Molina, H. (PI); Genesereth, M. (PI); Gill, J. (PI); Girod, B. (PI); Goel, A. (PI); Golub, G. (PI); Goodman, N. (PI); Guibas, L. (PI); Hanrahan, P. (PI); Heer, J. (PI); Hennessy, J. (PI); Horowitz, M. (PI); Johari, R. (PI); Johnson, M. (PI); Jurafsky, D. (PI); Katti, S. (PI); Kay, M. (PI); Khatib, O. (PI); Klemmer, S. (PI); Koller, D. (PI); Koltun, V. (PI); Konolige, K. (PI); Kozyrakis, C. (PI); Kundaje, A. (PI); Lam, M. (PI); Latombe, J. (PI); Leskovec, J. (PI); Levis, P. (PI); Levitt, M. (PI); Levoy, M. (PI); Li, F. (PI); Liang, P. (PI); Manna, Z. (PI); Manning, C. (PI); Mazieres, D. (PI); McCluskey, E. (PI); McKeown, N. (PI); Meng, T. (PI); Mitchell, J. (PI); Mitra, S. (PI); Montanari, A. (PI); Motwani, R. (PI); Musen, M. (PI); Nass, C. (PI); Nayak, P. (PI); Ng, A. (PI); Nilsson, N. (PI); Olukotun, O. (PI); Ousterhout, J. (PI); Paepcke, A. (PI); Pande, V. (PI); Parlante, N. (PI); Plotkin, S. (PI); Prabhakar, B. (PI); Pratt, V. (PI); Raghavan, P. (PI); Rajaraman, A. (PI); Re, C. (PI); Roberts, E. (PI); Rosenblum, M. (PI); Roughgarden, T. (PI); Sahami, M. (PI); Salisbury, J. (PI); Savarese, S. (PI); Schwarz, K. (PI); Shoham, Y. (PI); Thrun, S. (PI); Tobagi, F. (PI); Trevisan, L. (PI); Ullman, J. (PI); Valiant, G. (PI); Van Roy, B. (PI); Widom, J. (PI); Wiederhold, G. (PI); Williams, R. (PI); Williams, V. (PI); Winograd, T. (PI); Young, P. (PI); Zelenski, J. (PI); George, S. (GP); Hadding, D. (GP); Hartung, C. (GP); Siroker, M. (GP)

CS 390Q: Part-Time Curricular Practical Training

For qualified computer science PhD students only. Permission number required for enrollment; see the CS PhD program administrator in Gates room 196. May be taken just once; not repeatable. Educational opportunities in high technology research and development labs in the computing industry. Qualified computer science students engage in research and integrate that work into their academic program. Students register during the quarter they are employed and complete a research report outlining their work activity, problems investigated, results, and follow-on projects they expect to perform. Students on F1 visas should be aware that completing 12 or more months of full-time CPT will make them ineligible for Optional Practical Training (OPT).
Terms: Spr | Units: 1
Instructors: ; Aiken, A. (PI); Akeley, K. (PI); Altman, R. (PI); Baker, M. (PI); Barbagli, F. (PI); Batzoglou, S. (PI); Bejerano, G. (PI); Bernstein, M. (PI); Blikstein, P. (PI); Boneh, D. (PI); Boyd, S. (PI); Bradski, G. (PI); Brafman, R. (PI); Cain, J. (PI); Cao, P. (PI); Casado, M. (PI); Cheriton, D. (PI); Cooper, S. (PI); Dally, B. (PI); De-Micheli, G. (PI); Dill, D. (PI); Dror, R. (PI); Dwork, C. (PI); Engler, D. (PI); Ermon, S. (PI); Fedkiw, R. (PI); Feigenbaum, E. (PI); Fikes, R. (PI); Fisher, K. (PI); Fogg, B. (PI); Fox, A. (PI); Garcia-Molina, H. (PI); Genesereth, M. (PI); Gill, J. (PI); Girod, B. (PI); Goel, A. (PI); Golub, G. (PI); Goodman, N. (PI); Guibas, L. (PI); Hanrahan, P. (PI); Heer, J. (PI); Hennessy, J. (PI); Horowitz, M. (PI); Johari, R. (PI); Johnson, M. (PI); Jurafsky, D. (PI); Katti, S. (PI); Kay, M. (PI); Khatib, O. (PI); Klemmer, S. (PI); Koller, D. (PI); Koltun, V. (PI); Konolige, K. (PI); Kozyrakis, C. (PI); Kundaje, A. (PI); Lam, M. (PI); Landay, J. (PI); Latombe, J. (PI); Leskovec, J. (PI); Levis, P. (PI); Levitt, M. (PI); Levoy, M. (PI); Li, F. (PI); Liang, P. (PI); Mackey, L. (PI); Manna, Z. (PI); Manning, C. (PI); Mazieres, D. (PI); McCluskey, E. (PI); McKeown, N. (PI); Meng, T. (PI); Mitchell, J. (PI); Mitra, S. (PI); Montanari, A. (PI); Motwani, R. (PI); Musen, M. (PI); Nass, C. (PI); Nayak, P. (PI); Ng, A. (PI); Nilsson, N. (PI); Olukotun, O. (PI); Ousterhout, J. (PI); Paepcke, A. (PI); Pande, V. (PI); Parlante, N. (PI); Plotkin, S. (PI); Prabhakar, B. (PI); Pratt, V. (PI); Raghavan, P. (PI); Rajaraman, A. (PI); Re, C. (PI); Roberts, E. (PI); Rosenblum, M. (PI); Roughgarden, T. (PI); Sahami, M. (PI); Salisbury, J. (PI); Savarese, S. (PI); Schwarz, K. (PI); Shoham, Y. (PI); Stepp, M. (PI); Thrun, S. (PI); Tobagi, F. (PI); Trevisan, L. (PI); Ullman, J. (PI); Valiant, G. (PI); Van Roy, B. (PI); Widom, J. (PI); Wiederhold, G. (PI); Williams, R. (PI); Williams, V. (PI); Winograd, T. (PI); Winstein, K. (PI); Young, P. (PI); Zelenski, J. (PI); George, S. (GP); Hadding, D. (GP); Hartung, C. (GP); Siroker, M. (GP)

CS 393: Computer Laboratory

For CS graduate students. A substantial computer program is designed and implemented; written report required. Recommended as a preparation for dissertation research. Register using the section number associated with the instructor. Prerequisite: consent of instructor.
Terms: Aut, Win, Spr, Sum | Units: 1-9 | Repeatable for credit
Instructors: ; Aiken, A. (PI); Altman, R. (PI); Baker, M. (PI); Barbagli, F. (PI); Batzoglou, S. (PI); Bejerano, G. (PI); Boneh, D. (PI); Bradski, G. (PI); Brafman, R. (PI); Cain, J. (PI); Cao, P. (PI); Cheriton, D. (PI); Dally, B. (PI); De-Micheli, G. (PI); Dill, D. (PI); Dwork, C. (PI); Engler, D. (PI); Fedkiw, R. (PI); Feigenbaum, E. (PI); Fikes, R. (PI); Fisher, K. (PI); Fogg, B. (PI); Fox, A. (PI); Garcia-Molina, H. (PI); Genesereth, M. (PI); Gill, J. (PI); Girod, B. (PI); Goel, A. (PI); Golub, G. (PI); Guibas, L. (PI); Hanrahan, P. (PI); Heer, J. (PI); Hennessy, J. (PI); Horowitz, M. (PI); Johari, R. (PI); Johnson, M. (PI); Jurafsky, D. (PI); Katti, S. (PI); Kay, M. (PI); Khatib, O. (PI); Klemmer, S. (PI); Koller, D. (PI); Koltun, V. (PI); Konolige, K. (PI); Kozyrakis, C. (PI); Lam, M. (PI); Latombe, J. (PI); Leskovec, J. (PI); Levis, P. (PI); Levitt, M. (PI); Levoy, M. (PI); Li, F. (PI); Manna, Z. (PI); Manning, C. (PI); Mazieres, D. (PI); McCarthy, J. (PI); McCluskey, E. (PI); McKeown, N. (PI); Meng, T. (PI); Mitchell, J. (PI); Motwani, R. (PI); Musen, M. (PI); Nass, C. (PI); Nayak, P. (PI); Ng, A. (PI); Nilsson, N. (PI); Olukotun, O. (PI); Ousterhout, J. (PI); Parlante, N. (PI); Plotkin, S. (PI); Plummer, R. (PI); Prabhakar, B. (PI); Pratt, V. (PI); Raghavan, P. (PI); Rajaraman, A. (PI); Roberts, E. (PI); Rosenblum, M. (PI); Roughgarden, T. (PI); Sahami, M. (PI); Salisbury, J. (PI); Shoham, Y. (PI); Thrun, S. (PI); Tobagi, F. (PI); Trevisan, L. (PI); Ullman, J. (PI); Van Roy, B. (PI); Widom, J. (PI); Wiederhold, G. (PI); Winograd, T. (PI); Young, P. (PI); Zelenski, J. (PI); George, S. (GP); Hadding, D. (GP); Hartung, C. (GP); Siroker, M. (GP); Swenson, M. (GP)

CS 395: Independent Database Project

For graduate students in Computer Science. Use of database management or file systems for a substantial application or implementation of components of database management system. Written analysis and evaluation required. Register using the section number associated with the instructor. Prerequisite: consent of instructor.
Terms: Aut, Win, Spr, Sum | Units: 1-6 | Repeatable for credit
Instructors: ; Aiken, A. (PI); Altman, R. (PI); Baker, M. (PI); Barbagli, F. (PI); Batzoglou, S. (PI); Bejerano, G. (PI); Boneh, D. (PI); Bradski, G. (PI); Brafman, R. (PI); Cain, J. (PI); Cao, P. (PI); Cheriton, D. (PI); Dally, B. (PI); De-Micheli, G. (PI); Dill, D. (PI); Dwork, C. (PI); Engler, D. (PI); Fedkiw, R. (PI); Feigenbaum, E. (PI); Fikes, R. (PI); Fisher, K. (PI); Fogg, B. (PI); Fox, A. (PI); Garcia-Molina, H. (PI); Genesereth, M. (PI); Gill, J. (PI); Girod, B. (PI); Goel, A. (PI); Golub, G. (PI); Guibas, L. (PI); Hanrahan, P. (PI); Heer, J. (PI); Hennessy, J. (PI); Horowitz, M. (PI); Johari, R. (PI); Johnson, M. (PI); Jurafsky, D. (PI); Katti, S. (PI); Kay, M. (PI); Khatib, O. (PI); Klemmer, S. (PI); Koller, D. (PI); Koltun, V. (PI); Konolige, K. (PI); Kozyrakis, C. (PI); Lam, M. (PI); Latombe, J. (PI); Leskovec, J. (PI); Levis, P. (PI); Levitt, M. (PI); Levoy, M. (PI); Li, F. (PI); Manna, Z. (PI); Manning, C. (PI); Mazieres, D. (PI); McCarthy, J. (PI); McCluskey, E. (PI); McKeown, N. (PI); Meng, T. (PI); Mitchell, J. (PI); Motwani, R. (PI); Musen, M. (PI); Nass, C. (PI); Nayak, P. (PI); Ng, A. (PI); Nilsson, N. (PI); Olukotun, O. (PI); Ousterhout, J. (PI); Parlante, N. (PI); Plotkin, S. (PI); Plummer, R. (PI); Prabhakar, B. (PI); Pratt, V. (PI); Raghavan, P. (PI); Rajaraman, A. (PI); Roberts, E. (PI); Rosenblum, M. (PI); Roughgarden, T. (PI); Sahami, M. (PI); Salisbury, J. (PI); Shoham, Y. (PI); Thrun, S. (PI); Tobagi, F. (PI); Trevisan, L. (PI); Ullman, J. (PI); Van Roy, B. (PI); Widom, J. (PI); Wiederhold, G. (PI); Winograd, T. (PI); Young, P. (PI); Zelenski, J. (PI); George, S. (GP); Hadding, D. (GP); Hartung, C. (GP); Siroker, M. (GP); Swenson, M. (GP)

CS 399: Independent Project

Letter grade only.
Terms: Aut, Win, Spr, Sum | Units: 1-9 | Repeatable for credit
Instructors: ; Aiken, A. (PI); Akeley, K. (PI); Altman, R. (PI); Baker, M. (PI); Barbagli, F. (PI); Batzoglou, S. (PI); Bejerano, G. (PI); Bernstein, M. (PI); Blikstein, P. (PI); Boneh, D. (PI); Boyd, S. (PI); Bradski, G. (PI); Brafman, R. (PI); Cain, J. (PI); Cao, P. (PI); Casado, M. (PI); Cheriton, D. (PI); Cooper, S. (PI); Dally, B. (PI); De-Micheli, G. (PI); Dill, D. (PI); Dror, R. (PI); Dwork, C. (PI); Engler, D. (PI); Ermon, S. (PI); Fedkiw, R. (PI); Feigenbaum, E. (PI); Fikes, R. (PI); Fisher, K. (PI); Fogg, B. (PI); Fox, A. (PI); Garcia-Molina, H. (PI); Genesereth, M. (PI); Gill, J. (PI); Girod, B. (PI); Goel, A. (PI); Golub, G. (PI); Goodman, N. (PI); Guibas, L. (PI); Hanrahan, P. (PI); Heer, J. (PI); Hennessy, J. (PI); Horowitz, M. (PI); Johari, R. (PI); Johnson, M. (PI); Jurafsky, D. (PI); Katti, S. (PI); Kay, M. (PI); Khatib, O. (PI); Klemmer, S. (PI); Koller, D. (PI); Koltun, V. (PI); Konolige, K. (PI); Kozyrakis, C. (PI); Lam, M. (PI); Landay, J. (PI); Latombe, J. (PI); Lee, C. (PI); Leskovec, J. (PI); Levis, P. (PI); Levitt, M. (PI); Levoy, M. (PI); Li, F. (PI); Liang, P. (PI); MacCartney, B. (PI); Manna, Z. (PI); Manning, C. (PI); Mazieres, D. (PI); McCarthy, J. (PI); McCluskey, E. (PI); McKeown, N. (PI); Meng, T. (PI); Mitchell, J. (PI); Motwani, R. (PI); Musen, M. (PI); Nass, C. (PI); Nayak, P. (PI); Ng, A. (PI); Nilsson, N. (PI); Olukotun, O. (PI); Ousterhout, J. (PI); Paepcke, A. (PI); Pande, V. (PI); Parlante, N. (PI); Pea, R. (PI); Plotkin, S. (PI); Plummer, R. (PI); Prabhakar, B. (PI); Pratt, V. (PI); Raghavan, P. (PI); Rajaraman, A. (PI); Re, C. (PI); Roberts, E. (PI); Rosenblum, M. (PI); Roughgarden, T. (PI); Sahami, M. (PI); Salisbury, J. (PI); Savarese, S. (PI); Saxena, A. (PI); Schwarz, K. (PI); Shoham, Y. (PI); Sosic, R. (PI); Stepp, M. (PI); Thrun, S. (PI); Tobagi, F. (PI); Trevisan, L. (PI); Ullman, J. (PI); Valiant, G. (PI); Van Roy, B. (PI); Wang, G. (PI); Widom, J. (PI); Wiederhold, G. (PI); Williams, R. (PI); Williams, V. (PI); Winograd, T. (PI); Winstein, K. (PI); Young, P. (PI); Zelenski, J. (PI); George, S. (GP); Hadding, D. (GP); Hartung, C. (GP); Siroker, M. (GP); Swenson, M. (GP)

CS 399P: Independent Project

Graded satisfactory/no credit.
Terms: Aut, Win, Spr, Sum | Units: 1-9 | Repeatable for credit
Instructors: ; Aiken, A. (PI); Akeley, K. (PI); Altman, R. (PI); Baker, M. (PI); Barbagli, F. (PI); Batzoglou, S. (PI); Bejerano, G. (PI); Bernstein, M. (PI); Blikstein, P. (PI); Boneh, D. (PI); Boyd, S. (PI); Bradski, G. (PI); Brafman, R. (PI); Cain, J. (PI); Cao, P. (PI); Casado, M. (PI); Cheriton, D. (PI); Cooper, S. (PI); Dally, B. (PI); De-Micheli, G. (PI); Dill, D. (PI); Dror, R. (PI); Dwork, C. (PI); Engler, D. (PI); Fedkiw, R. (PI); Feigenbaum, E. (PI); Fikes, R. (PI); Fisher, K. (PI); Fogg, B. (PI); Fox, A. (PI); Garcia-Molina, H. (PI); Genesereth, M. (PI); Gill, J. (PI); Girod, B. (PI); Goel, A. (PI); Golub, G. (PI); Goodman, N. (PI); Guibas, L. (PI); Hanrahan, P. (PI); Heer, J. (PI); Hennessy, J. (PI); Horowitz, M. (PI); Johari, R. (PI); Johnson, M. (PI); Jurafsky, D. (PI); Katti, S. (PI); Kay, M. (PI); Khatib, O. (PI); Klemmer, S. (PI); Koller, D. (PI); Koltun, V. (PI); Konolige, K. (PI); Kozyrakis, C. (PI); Lam, M. (PI); Landay, J. (PI); Latombe, J. (PI); Lee, C. (PI); Leskovec, J. (PI); Levis, P. (PI); Levitt, M. (PI); Levoy, M. (PI); Li, F. (PI); Liang, P. (PI); Manna, Z. (PI); Manning, C. (PI); Mazieres, D. (PI); McCarthy, J. (PI); McCluskey, E. (PI); McKeown, N. (PI); Meng, T. (PI); Mitchell, J. (PI); Motwani, R. (PI); Musen, M. (PI); Nass, C. (PI); Nayak, P. (PI); Ng, A. (PI); Nilsson, N. (PI); Olukotun, O. (PI); Ousterhout, J. (PI); Paepcke, A. (PI); Parlante, N. (PI); Plotkin, S. (PI); Plummer, R. (PI); Prabhakar, B. (PI); Pratt, V. (PI); Raghavan, P. (PI); Rajaraman, A. (PI); Re, C. (PI); Roberts, E. (PI); Rosenblum, M. (PI); Roughgarden, T. (PI); Sahami, M. (PI); Salisbury, J. (PI); Savarese, S. (PI); Saxena, A. (PI); Shoham, Y. (PI); Stepp, M. (PI); Thrun, S. (PI); Tobagi, F. (PI); Trevisan, L. (PI); Ullman, J. (PI); Valiant, G. (PI); Van Roy, B. (PI); Wang, G. (PI); Widom, J. (PI); Wiederhold, G. (PI); Williams, R. (PI); Williams, V. (PI); Winograd, T. (PI); Young, P. (PI); Zelenski, J. (PI); George, S. (GP); Hadding, D. (GP); Hartung, C. (GP); Siroker, M. (GP); Swenson, M. (GP)

CS 499: Advanced Reading and Research

Letter grade only. Advanced reading and research for CS graduate students. Register using the section number associated with the instructor. Prerequisite: consent of instructor.
Terms: Aut, Win, Spr, Sum | Units: 1-15 | Repeatable for credit
Instructors: ; Aiken, A. (PI); Akeley, K. (PI); Altman, R. (PI); Baker, M. (PI); Barbagli, F. (PI); Batzoglou, S. (PI); Bejerano, G. (PI); Bernstein, M. (PI); Boneh, D. (PI); Boyd, S. (PI); Bradski, G. (PI); Brafman, R. (PI); Cain, J. (PI); Cao, P. (PI); Casado, M. (PI); Cheriton, D. (PI); Cooper, S. (PI); Dally, B. (PI); De-Micheli, G. (PI); Dill, D. (PI); Dror, R. (PI); Dwork, C. (PI); Engler, D. (PI); Ermon, S. (PI); Fedkiw, R. (PI); Feigenbaum, E. (PI); Fikes, R. (PI); Fisher, K. (PI); Fogg, B. (PI); Fox, A. (PI); Garcia-Molina, H. (PI); Genesereth, M. (PI); Gill, J. (PI); Girod, B. (PI); Goel, A. (PI); Golub, G. (PI); Goodman, N. (PI); Guibas, L. (PI); Hanrahan, P. (PI); Heer, J. (PI); Hennessy, J. (PI); Horowitz, M. (PI); Johari, R. (PI); Johnson, M. (PI); Jurafsky, D. (PI); Katti, S. (PI); Kay, M. (PI); Khatib, O. (PI); Klemmer, S. (PI); Koller, D. (PI); Koltun, V. (PI); Konolige, K. (PI); Kozyrakis, C. (PI); Kundaje, A. (PI); Lam, M. (PI); Landay, J. (PI); Latombe, J. (PI); Leskovec, J. (PI); Levis, P. (PI); Levitt, M. (PI); Levoy, M. (PI); Li, F. (PI); Liang, P. (PI); Mackey, L. (PI); Manna, Z. (PI); Manning, C. (PI); Mazieres, D. (PI); McCarthy, J. (PI); McCluskey, E. (PI); McKeown, N. (PI); Meng, T. (PI); Mitchell, J. (PI); Mitra, S. (PI); Montanari, A. (PI); Motwani, R. (PI); Musen, M. (PI); Nass, C. (PI); Nayak, P. (PI); Ng, A. (PI); Nilsson, N. (PI); Olukotun, O. (PI); Ousterhout, J. (PI); Paepcke, A. (PI); Parlante, N. (PI); Plotkin, S. (PI); Plummer, R. (PI); Prabhakar, B. (PI); Pratt, V. (PI); Raghavan, P. (PI); Rajaraman, A. (PI); Re, C. (PI); Roberts, E. (PI); Rosenblum, M. (PI); Roughgarden, T. (PI); Saberi, A. (PI); Sahami, M. (PI); Salisbury, J. (PI); Savarese, S. (PI); Saxena, A. (PI); Schwarz, K. (PI); Shoham, Y. (PI); Sosic, R. (PI); Stepp, M. (PI); Thrun, S. (PI); Tobagi, F. (PI); Trevisan, L. (PI); Ullman, J. (PI); Valiant, G. (PI); Van Roy, B. (PI); Widom, J. (PI); Wiederhold, G. (PI); Williams, R. (PI); Williams, V. (PI); Winograd, T. (PI); Winstein, K. (PI); Young, P. (PI); Zelenski, J. (PI); George, S. (GP); Hadding, D. (GP); Hartung, C. (GP); Siroker, M. (GP); Swenson, M. (GP)

CS 499P: Advanced Reading and Research

Graded satisfactory/no credit. Advanced reading and research for CS graduate students. Register using the section number associated with the instructor. Prerequisite: consent of instructor.
Terms: Aut, Win, Spr, Sum | Units: 1-15 | Repeatable for credit
Instructors: ; Aiken, A. (PI); Akeley, K. (PI); Altman, R. (PI); Baker, M. (PI); Barbagli, F. (PI); Batzoglou, S. (PI); Bejerano, G. (PI); Bernstein, M. (PI); Blikstein, P. (PI); Boneh, D. (PI); Boyd, S. (PI); Bradski, G. (PI); Brafman, R. (PI); Cain, J. (PI); Cao, P. (PI); Casado, M. (PI); Cheriton, D. (PI); Cooper, S. (PI); Dally, B. (PI); De-Micheli, G. (PI); Dill, D. (PI); Dror, R. (PI); Dwork, C. (PI); Engler, D. (PI); Ermon, S. (PI); Fedkiw, R. (PI); Feigenbaum, E. (PI); Fikes, R. (PI); Fisher, K. (PI); Fogg, B. (PI); Fox, A. (PI); Garcia-Molina, H. (PI); Genesereth, M. (PI); Gill, J. (PI); Girod, B. (PI); Goel, A. (PI); Golub, G. (PI); Goodman, N. (PI); Guibas, L. (PI); Hanrahan, P. (PI); Heer, J. (PI); Hennessy, J. (PI); Horowitz, M. (PI); Johari, R. (PI); Johnson, M. (PI); Jurafsky, D. (PI); Katti, S. (PI); Kay, M. (PI); Khatib, O. (PI); Klemmer, S. (PI); Koller, D. (PI); Koltun, V. (PI); Konolige, K. (PI); Kozyrakis, C. (PI); Kundaje, A. (PI); Lam, M. (PI); Landay, J. (PI); Latombe, J. (PI); Leskovec, J. (PI); Levis, P. (PI); Levitt, M. (PI); Levoy, M. (PI); Li, F. (PI); Liang, P. (PI); Mackey, L. (PI); Manna, Z. (PI); Manning, C. (PI); Mazieres, D. (PI); McCarthy, J. (PI); McCluskey, E. (PI); McKeown, N. (PI); Meng, T. (PI); Mitchell, J. (PI); Mitra, S. (PI); Motwani, R. (PI); Musen, M. (PI); Nass, C. (PI); Nayak, P. (PI); Ng, A. (PI); Nilsson, N. (PI); Olukotun, O. (PI); Ousterhout, J. (PI); Paepcke, A. (PI); Parlante, N. (PI); Plotkin, S. (PI); Plummer, R. (PI); Prabhakar, B. (PI); Pratt, V. (PI); Raghavan, P. (PI); Rajaraman, A. (PI); Re, C. (PI); Roberts, E. (PI); Rosenblum, M. (PI); Roughgarden, T. (PI); Saberi, A. (PI); Sahami, M. (PI); Salisbury, J. (PI); Savarese, S. (PI); Saxena, A. (PI); Schwarz, K. (PI); Shoham, Y. (PI); Sosic, R. (PI); Thrun, S. (PI); Tobagi, F. (PI); Trevisan, L. (PI); Ullman, J. (PI); Valiant, G. (PI); Van Roy, B. (PI); Wang, G. (PI); Widom, J. (PI); Wiederhold, G. (PI); Williams, R. (PI); Williams, V. (PI); Winograd, T. (PI); Winstein, K. (PI); Young, P. (PI); Zelenski, J. (PI); George, S. (GP); Hadding, D. (GP); Hartung, C. (GP); Siroker, M. (GP); Swenson, M. (GP)

CS 547: Human-Computer Interaction Seminar

Weekly speakers on human-computer interaction topics. May be repeated for credit.
Terms: Aut, Win, Spr | Units: 1 | Repeatable for credit

CS 571: Surgical Robotics Seminar (ME 571)

Surgical robots developed and implemented clinically on varying scales. Seminar goal is to expose students from engineering, medicine, and business to guest lecturers from academia and industry.engineering and clinical aspects connected to design and use of surgical robots, varying in degree of complexity and procedural role. May be repeated for credit.
Terms: Spr | Units: 1 | Repeatable for credit

CS 801: TGR Project

Terms: Aut, Win, Spr, Sum | Units: 0 | Repeatable for credit
Instructors: ; Aiken, A. (PI); Altman, R. (PI); Baker, M. (PI); Barbagli, F. (PI); Batzoglou, S. (PI); Bejerano, G. (PI); Bernstein, M. (PI); Blikstein, P. (PI); Boneh, D. (PI); Bradski, G. (PI); Brafman, R. (PI); Cain, J. (PI); Cao, P. (PI); Cheriton, D. (PI); Dally, B. (PI); De-Micheli, G. (PI); Dill, D. (PI); Dwork, C. (PI); Engler, D. (PI); Fedkiw, R. (PI); Feigenbaum, E. (PI); Fikes, R. (PI); Fisher, K. (PI); Fogg, B. (PI); Fox, A. (PI); Garcia-Molina, H. (PI); Genesereth, M. (PI); Gill, J. (PI); Girod, B. (PI); Goel, A. (PI); Golub, G. (PI); Guibas, L. (PI); Hanrahan, P. (PI); Heer, J. (PI); Hennessy, J. (PI); Horowitz, M. (PI); Johari, R. (PI); Johnson, M. (PI); Jurafsky, D. (PI); Katti, S. (PI); Kay, M. (PI); Khatib, O. (PI); Klemmer, S. (PI); Koller, D. (PI); Koltun, V. (PI); Konolige, K. (PI); Kozyrakis, C. (PI); Lam, M. (PI); Latombe, J. (PI); Leskovec, J. (PI); Levis, P. (PI); Levitt, M. (PI); Levoy, M. (PI); Li, F. (PI); Liang, P. (PI); Mackey, L. (PI); Manna, Z. (PI); Manning, C. (PI); Mazieres, D. (PI); McCarthy, J. (PI); McCluskey, E. (PI); McKeown, N. (PI); Meng, T. (PI); Mitchell, J. (PI); Motwani, R. (PI); Musen, M. (PI); Nass, C. (PI); Nayak, P. (PI); Ng, A. (PI); Nilsson, N. (PI); Olukotun, O. (PI); Ousterhout, J. (PI); Parlante, N. (PI); Pea, R. (PI); Plotkin, S. (PI); Plummer, R. (PI); Prabhakar, B. (PI); Pratt, V. (PI); Raghavan, P. (PI); Rajaraman, A. (PI); Roberts, E. (PI); Rosenblum, M. (PI); Roughgarden, T. (PI); Sahami, M. (PI); Salisbury, J. (PI); Shoham, Y. (PI); Thrun, S. (PI); Tobagi, F. (PI); Trevisan, L. (PI); Ullman, J. (PI); Van Roy, B. (PI); Widom, J. (PI); Wiederhold, G. (PI); Williams, R. (PI); Winograd, T. (PI); Young, P. (PI); Zelenski, J. (PI); George, S. (GP); Hadding, D. (GP); Hartung, C. (GP); Siroker, M. (GP); Swenson, M. (GP)

CS 802: TGR Dissertation

Terms: Aut, Win, Spr, Sum | Units: 0 | Repeatable for credit
Instructors: ; Aiken, A. (PI); Akeley, K. (PI); Altman, R. (PI); Baker, M. (PI); Barbagli, F. (PI); Batzoglou, S. (PI); Bejerano, G. (PI); Bernstein, M. (PI); Blikstein, P. (PI); Boneh, D. (PI); Bradski, G. (PI); Brafman, R. (PI); Cain, J. (PI); Cao, P. (PI); Casado, M. (PI); Cheriton, D. (PI); Cooper, S. (PI); Dally, B. (PI); De-Micheli, G. (PI); Dill, D. (PI); Dror, R. (PI); Dwork, C. (PI); Engler, D. (PI); Ermon, S. (PI); Fedkiw, R. (PI); Feigenbaum, E. (PI); Fikes, R. (PI); Fisher, K. (PI); Fogg, B. (PI); Fox, A. (PI); Garcia-Molina, H. (PI); Genesereth, M. (PI); Gill, J. (PI); Girod, B. (PI); Goel, A. (PI); Golub, G. (PI); Guibas, L. (PI); Hanrahan, P. (PI); Heer, J. (PI); Hennessy, J. (PI); Horowitz, M. (PI); Johari, R. (PI); Johnson, M. (PI); Jurafsky, D. (PI); Katti, S. (PI); Kay, M. (PI); Khatib, O. (PI); Klemmer, S. (PI); Koller, D. (PI); Koltun, V. (PI); Konolige, K. (PI); Kozyrakis, C. (PI); Kundaje, A. (PI); Lam, M. (PI); Landay, J. (PI); Latombe, J. (PI); Leskovec, J. (PI); Levis, P. (PI); Levitt, M. (PI); Levoy, M. (PI); Li, F. (PI); Liang, P. (PI); Mackey, L. (PI); Manna, Z. (PI); Manning, C. (PI); Mazieres, D. (PI); McCarthy, J. (PI); McCluskey, E. (PI); McKeown, N. (PI); Meng, T. (PI); Mitchell, J. (PI); Motwani, R. (PI); Musen, M. (PI); Nass, C. (PI); Nayak, P. (PI); Ng, A. (PI); Nilsson, N. (PI); Olukotun, O. (PI); Ousterhout, J. (PI); Parlante, N. (PI); Pea, R. (PI); Plotkin, S. (PI); Plummer, R. (PI); Prabhakar, B. (PI); Pratt, V. (PI); Raghavan, P. (PI); Rajaraman, A. (PI); Roberts, E. (PI); Rosenblum, M. (PI); Roughgarden, T. (PI); Sahami, M. (PI); Salisbury, J. (PI); Savarese, S. (PI); Shoham, Y. (PI); Thrun, S. (PI); Tobagi, F. (PI); Trevisan, L. (PI); Ullman, J. (PI); Van Roy, B. (PI); Widom, J. (PI); Wiederhold, G. (PI); Williams, R. (PI); Winograd, T. (PI); Winstein, K. (PI); Young, P. (PI); Zelenski, J. (PI); George, S. (GP); Hadding, D. (GP); Hartung, C. (GP); Siroker, M. (GP); Swenson, M. (GP)
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