\setlength{\fboxsep}{2ex} \fbox{\parbox{0.95\linewidth}{\small \textbf{Evaluation criteria:} Each project has three elements that are graded: (i) the code, (ii) the quality of the figures, and (iii) the presentation (see below). \vspace{1ex} \textbf{Dates:} The code and the presentation should be uploaded to ILIAS at latest on Sunday, February 4th, 23:59h. We will store all presentations on one computer to allow fast transitions between talks. The presentations start on Monday, February 5th at 9:15h. \vspace{1ex} \textbf{Files:} Please hand in your presentation as a pdf file. Bundle everything (the pdf, the code, and the data) into a {\em single} zip-file. \vspace{1ex} \textbf{Code:} The code should be executable without any further adjustments from our side. A single \texttt{main.m} script should coordinate the analysis by calling functions and sub-scripts and should produce the {\em same} figures (\texttt{saveas()}-function, pdf or png format) that you use in your slides. The code should be properly commented and comprehensible by a third person (use proper and consistent variable and function names). % Hint: make the zip file you want to upload, unpack it % somewhere else and check if your main script is running. \vspace{1ex} \emph{Please write your name and matriculation number as a comment at the top of the \texttt{main.m} script.} \vspace{1ex} \textbf{Presentation:} The presentation should be {\em at most} 10min long and be held in English. In the presentation you should present figures introducing, explaining, showing, and discussing your data, methods, and results. All data-related figures you show in the presentation should be produced by your program --- no editing or labeling by PowerPoint or other software. It is always a good idea to illustrate the problem with basic plots of the raw-data. Make sure the axis labels are large enough! }}