\setlength{\fboxsep}{2ex} \fbox{\parbox{0.95\linewidth}{\small This is your project assignment. Please read the instructions before starting your work. Do not understand the assignment as an exhaustive TODO list, rather the questions below are hints that are meant to guide you and allow for a smoother start. Do not feel limited by the questions; we want to see you diving into it. Happy hacking! \vspace{1ex} \textbf{Evaluation criteria:} You can view the evaluation criteria on the \emph{SciCompScoreSheet.pdf} on Ilias. \vspace{1ex} \textbf{Dates:} The code and the presentation must be uploaded to ILIAS \textbf{at latest on Sunday, February 21st, 2021, 23:59h}. We will store all presentations on one computer to allow for fast transitions between talks. The presentations are on Monday February 22nd, 09:30--12:00, Tuesday February 23rd, 9:30--11:00 and Wednesday 24th, 09:30--12:00. \vspace{1ex} \textbf{Files:} \textbf{Hand in your presentation as a pdf file.} Bundle everything (the pdf, the code, and the data) into a {\em single} zip-file named with your last name. \textbf{Hint:} create the zip file you want to upload, unpack it somewhere else on your computer and check if your main script is still running properly. \vspace{1ex} \textbf{Code:} The code must be executable without any further adjustments from our side. (Test it!) A single \texttt{main.m} script coordinates the analysis by calling functions and/or sub-scripts (see Box 1.10 in chapter 1) which produce the {\em same} figures (\texttt{saveas()}-function, pdf or png format) that you use in your slides (your code can also generate additional figures). The code must be comprehensible by a third person (use proper and consistent variable and function names, see chapter 4). \textbf{Hint:} Find out what RTFM means and act accordingly ;). You can also always try to google your problems. \vspace{1ex} \emph{Please note 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} 10\,min 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 shown in the presentation must 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! }}