42 lines
1.7 KiB
TeX
42 lines
1.7 KiB
TeX
\fbox{\parbox{0.985\linewidth}{ \small
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{\bf Evaluation criteria:}
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Each project has three elements that are graded: (i) the code,
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(ii) the slides/figures, and (iii) the presentation.
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\vspace{1ex}
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The {\bf code} and the {\bf presentation} should be uploaded to
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ILIAS at latest on Thursday, November 6th, 12:00h.
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The presentations start on Thursday 13:00h. Please hand in
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your presentation as a pdf file. Bundle everything into a
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{\em single} zip-file.
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\vspace{1ex}
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The {\bf code} should be exectuable without any further
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adjustments from us. This means that you need to include all
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additional functions you wrote and the data into the
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zip-file. A single {\em main script} should produce the same
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{\em figures} that you use in your slides. The figures should
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follow the guidelines for proper plotting as discussed in the
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first statistics lecture. The code should be properly commented
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and comprehensible by third persons (use proper and consistent
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variable names).
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\vspace{1ex} \textbf{Please write your name and matriculation
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number as a comment at the top of a script called \texttt{main.m}!}
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The \texttt{main.m} script then should call all your scripts.
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\vspace{1ex}
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The {\bf presentation} should be {\em at most} 10min long and be
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held in English. In the presentation you should (i) briefly
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describe the problem, (ii) explain how you solved it
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algorithmically (don't show your entire code), and (iii) present
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figures showing your results. We will store all presentations on
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one computer to allow fast transitions between talks.
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}}
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