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COURSE DESCRIPTIONS


SAMPLE COURSE DESCRIPTION

COURSE NUMBERING SYSTEM

GENERAL EDUCATION DESIGNATION

DEPARTMENTS OFFERING DIVERSIFICATION COURSES

Electrical Engineering (EE)

College of Engineering

Preference in registration is given to declared engineering majors. Please consult the current Schedule of Courses for confirmed offerings each semester.

EE 101 Electrical Engineering Skills (3) Electrical engineering subjects in a skill acquisition context at the freshman level. Learning, creative problem solving, brainstorming, technical information assimilation, and presentation skills development. Repeatable two times. DP

EE 160 Programming for Engineers (4) (3 Lec, 1 3-hr Lab) Introductory course on computer programming and modern computing environments with an emphasis on algorithm and program design, implementation, and debugging. Includes a hands-on laboratory to develop and practice programming skills. Restricted to engineering freshmen and sophomores. A-F only. Pre: Math 140 (or equivalent) or consent.

EE 196 Freshmen Project (V) Freshman level individual or team project under EE faculty direction and guidance. This project provides early student entry into EE hands-on project activity providing practical skills, EE subject exposure and experience. Second semester freshman standing required. Repeatable unlimited times. Pre: consent.

EE 211 Basic Circuit Analysis I (4) (3 Lec, 1 3-hr Lab) Linear passive circuits, time domain analysis, transient and steady-state responses, phasors, impedance and admittance; power and energy, frequency responses, resonance. Pre: MATH 243 (or concurrent) and PHYS 272 (or concurrent), or consent. DP

EE 213 Basic Circuit Analysis II (4) (3 Lec, 1 3-hr Lab) Laplace transforms and their application to circuits, Fourier transforms and their applications to circuits, frequency selective circuits, introduction to and design of active filters, convolution, and state space analysis of circuits. A-F only. Pre: 211 or consent. Co-requisite: MATH 244. DP

EE 260 Introduction to Digital Design (4) (3 Lec, 1 3-hr Lab) Introduction to the design of digital systems with an emphasis on design methods and the implementation and use of fundamental digital components. Pre: 160 or consent.

EE 296 Sophomore Project (V) Sophomore level individual or team project under EE faculty direction and guidance. The project provides design experience and develops practical skills. Repeatable unlimited times. Pre: sophomore standing or consent.

Registration in upper division courses will be contingent upon earning a grade of C or better in prerequisite courses.

EE 315 Signal and Systems Analysis (3) Discrete Fourier transform, Fourier series, Fourier transform, Laplace transform. Fast Fourier transform, analysis of linear systems. Pre: 213 and MATH 244 or MATH 253A; or consent.

EE 323 Microelectronic Circuits I (3) Semiconductor structures, operating principles and characteristics of diodes and amplifying devices. Their application as circuit elements in building basic digital, analog, and integrated circuit subsystems. Pre: 213 and 324. DP

EE 323L Microelectronic Circuits I Lab (1) (1 3-hr Lab) Experiments on linear and logic properties of diodes and transistor networks. Pre: 213. Co-requisite: 323. DY

EE 324 Physical Electronics (3) Review of quantum mechanics fundamentals, H-atom, and chemical bonding. Introduction to band structure models and materials. Semiconductor doping, charge carrier statistics and charge transport, including ambipolar transport. Metal-semiconductor and PN junctions. Pre: MATH 243 or MATH 253A, and PHYS 274; or consent. DP

EE 326 Microelectronic Circuits II (3) Principles and design of linear electronic circuits including differential, operational, feedback, and tuned amplifiers; integrated circuits, current mirrors, signal generators, filters, and stability. Pre: 323. DP

EE 326L Microelectronic Circuits II Lab (1) (1 3-hr Lab) Laboratory for 326, experiments on linear and analog electronics. Pre: 323L. Co-requisite: 326. DY

EE 327 Theory and Design of IC Devices (3) Band structure models and carrier transport physics review. Theory and design of semiconductor IC devices: Schottky diodes, bipolar devices (PN junction diodes, BJTs), FETs (MOSFETs, JFETs, and MESFETs). Pre: 324 and MATH 243 or MATH 253A; or consent. DP

EE 328 Microcircuit Fabrication (3) Technology principles, materials, and methods for the design and fabrication of semiconductor devices, integrated circuits, and microelectromechanical systems. Pre: 327 or consent. Co-requisite: 382L. DP

EE 328LMicrocircuit Fabrication Lab (1) (1 3-hr Lab) Hands-on laboratory where students make various electronic and electromechanical micro-devices using IC technology. Devices are also tested and analyzed. Pre: 324 or consent. Co-requisite: 328. DY

EE 341 Introduction to Communication Systems (3) Signal representation, Fourier analysis; amplitude and angle modulated systems; sampling theorems, pulse and digital modulation systems; carrier modulation by digital signals. Pre: 315.

EE 341L Communication Systems Lab (1) (1 3-hr Lab) Experiments illustrating the basic principles of communication systems. Pre: 315. Co-requisite: 341.

EE 342 EE Probability and Statistics (3) Probability, statistics, random variables, distributions, densities, expectations, limit theorems, and applications to electrical engineering. Pre: 315 (or concurrent) and MATH 244 or MATH 253A; or consent.

EE 344 Networking I (4) (3 Lec, 1 3-hr Lab) Covers 4 semesters from the Cisco Networking Academy plus supplementary material; hands-on experience with routers and switches; prepares students for the CCNA. Topics include TCP/IP, LANs, WANs, routing protocols, network security; PPP; ISDN, frame relay. A-F only. Pre: 160 or consent.

EE 351 Feedback-Control Systems (3) Analysis/design of feedback systems. Compensator design via root locus and Bode analysis. Routh/Nyquist stability. State space representation and introduction to MIMO formulation. Controllability/observability. Application to physical dynamic systems such as industrial robots. Pre: 315 or ME 375 or consent. (Cross-listed as ME 451) DP

EE 351L Linear Feedback-Control Systems Lab (1) (1 3-hr Lab) Provides experience in applying theoretical tools to analyze linear systems. Extensive use is made of computer-aided analysis and design packages study system performance. Pre: 315. Co-requisite: 351.

EE 361 Digital Systems and Computer Design (3) Design methodology, processor design, control design, memory organization, system organization. Pre: 213 and 260, or consent.

EE 361L Digital Systems and Computer Design Lab (1) (1 3-hr Lab) Laboratory for 361, experiments on digital systems and interfacing. Co-requisite: 361.

EE 366 CMOS VLSI Design (4) (3 Lec, 1 3-hr Lab) Introduction to the design of very large scale integrated (VLSI) systems and use of CAD tools and design languages. Lab includes hands-on use of CAD tools and experiments with field programmable logic devices. Pre: 260.

EE 367 Computer Data Structures and Algorithms (3) Introduction to computer programming algorithms with emphasis on advanced data structures, input-output routines, files, and interpreters. Pre: 160.

EE 367L Computer Data Structures and Algorithms Lab (1) (1 3-hr Lab) Laboratory for 367. Pre: 367.

EE 371 Engineering Electromagnetics I (3) Transient and steady-state waves on transmission lines. Plane wave solutions of Maxwell’s equations. Application of Maxwell’s equations under static and time-varying conditions. Pre: 213.

EE 372 Engineering Electromagnetics II (3) Solution of Maxwell’s equations under various boundary conditions. Introduction to radiation, guided waves, and principles of optics. Pre: 371 and PHYS 274 (or concurrent); or consent.

EE 372L Engineering Electromagnetics Lab (1) (1 3-hr Lab) Experiments illustrating the basic principles of electromagnetics and optics. Pre: 371 and PHYS 274 (or concurrent), or consent. Co-requisite: 372.

EE 396 Junior Project (V) Junior level individual or team project under EE faculty direction and guidance. The project provides design experience and develops practical skills. It may be a continuation of EE 296 or a new project. Repeatable unlimited times. Pre: 296, junior standing or consent.

EE 415 Digital Signal Processing (4) (3 Lec, 1 3-hr Lab) Discrete-time signals and systems, sampling, Z-transform, transform, transform analysis of linear time-invariant systems, filter design, discrete Fourier transform, and computation of discrete Fourier transform. Repeatable one time. Pre: 315 and 342 (or concurrent), or consent.

EE 422 Electronic Instrumentation (3) Electronic circuits for interfacing with transducers, signal processing, and data acquisition. Amplifiers for measurement and control. Operational amplifiers in linear, nonlinear, and digital applications. Design project. Basic transducers. Pre: 326, 326L, and 371; or consent. DP

EE 422L Instrumentation Lab (1) (1 3-hr Lab) Laboratory for 422. Co-requisite: 422. DY

EE 423 Computer-Aided Analysis and Design (3) Algorithms and techniques used in computer-aided analysis and design of electronic circuits. Circuit simulation with interactive computers. Pre: 326 or consent.

EE 425 Electronic Instrumentation II (3) Instrumentation systems and circuits for measurement, control, signal processing, transmission, and detection. Noise and interference, ADC/DAC, modulation demodulation, high-frequency and high-speed techniques, IC applications. Pre: 422 and 422L, or consent. DP

EE 426 Advanced Si IC and Solid State Devices (3) State of the art Si-based devices including advanced bipolar and MOS devices, heterojunction devices, new device trends. Topics from the most current literature included. Pre: 327 and MATH 243 or MATH 253A, or consent. DP

EE 427 Computer-Aided Circuit Design (3) Application of the computer to the analysis, design, simulation, and construction of analog and digital circuits. Pre: 326 and 326L, or consent. DP

EE 442 Digital Communications (3) Baseband transmission, intersymbol interference and pulse shaping, partial response signaling, equalization, bandpass modulation and demodulation, channel coding, synchronization, multiplexing and multiple access, spread spectrum techniques. Pre: 341 and 342, or consent.

EE 446 Information Theory and Coding (3) Models of communication systems. Channel noise, measurement, and coding of information. Intrinsic limits of performance of communication systems. Pre: 341 and 342, or consent.

EE 449 Computer Communication Networks (3) ISO Reference Model, Physical Layer, Data Link Layer protocols, local- and wide-area networks, routing, congestion and flow control, higher layer protocols, network design, ISDN, performance evaluation, high-speed networks. Pre: 315 and one of 342, MATH 371 or MATH 471; or consent.

EE 452 Digital Control Systems (3) Sampling/reconstruction, Z-transform, DT transfer function. Reachability/observability. State and output feedback, observer design, input-output models, diophantine equations. Implementation procedures. Pre: 315 and 351, or consent.

EE 453 Modern Control Theory (3) Analysis and synthesis of nonlinear control systems by means of Lagrange’s equation, state space techniques, maximum principle. Lyapunov’s theorems, the phase plane, and Z-transform techniques. Optimization and adaptation by means of gradient methods, calculus of variations, dynamic programming. Pre: 351.

EE 455 Design of Intelligent Robots (3) Study of the design principles of computer-controlled, intelligent robots such as roving vehicles, hand-eye systems. Pre: 351 and 367. DP

EE 461 Computer Architecture (3) Structure of stored program machines, data flow machines, pipelining, fault-tolerant computing, instruction set design, effects of compilation on architecture, RISC vs. CISC architecture, uses of parallelism. Pre: 361.

EE 467 Object-oriented Software Engineering (3) Introduction to advanced techniques for designing, implementing, and testing computer software with a particular focus on using object-oriented design, analysis, and programming to produce high-quality computer programs that solve non-trivial problems. Pre: 367 or consent.

EE 468 Introduction to Operating Systems (3) Computer system organization; multiprocessor systems, memory hierarchies, assemblers, compilers, operating systems, virtual machine, memory management, processor management; information management. Pre: 260 and 367, or consent.

EE 469 Wireless Data Networks (3) Mobile agent’s platforms and systems, mobile agent-based service implementation, middleware, and configuration, wireless local area networks, wireless protocols, network architecture supporting wireless applications, routing protocols in mobile and wireless networks, handoff in mobile and wireless networks. Pre: 344 and 367, or consent.

EE 470 Physical Optics (3) Fundamentals of classical physical optics emphasizing linear systems theory, including optical fields in matter, polarization phenomena, temporal coherence, interference and diffraction (Fourier optics). Specialized applications include Gaussian beams, laser resonators, pulse propagation, and nonlinear optics. Pre: 371 and 315 (or concurrent), or PHYS 350 and PHYS 400 (or concurrent); or consent. DP (Cross-listed as PHYS 460)

EE 473 Microwave Engineering (3) Passive and active microwave devices and circuits for RF and wireless applications. Scattering parameters, signal-flow graphs, and computer-aided design. Pre: 371. DP

EE 474 Antennas (3) Electromagnetic wave propagation in free space and ionized media. Geomagnetic and solar effects on the ionosphere. Absorption and dispersion. Antenna arrays, apertures, horns, impedance. Design of antenna systems. Pre: 371. DP

EE 475 Optical Communications (3) Principles and applications of optical fibers and waveguides. Fundamentals of optical communication systems (optical links, high-speed systems, wavelength-division-multiplexing networks, and network elements) and optical components (guided-wave circuits, lasers, detectors, and optical amplifiers). System and network integration issues. A-F only. Pre: 341 (or concurrent) and 372, or consent. DP

EE 477 Fundamentals of Radar, Sonar, and Navigation Systems (3) Discussion of basic radar detection and position- and velocity-measurement principles. Applications to various types of radar and sonar systems. Modern navigation aids. Pre: 371 (or equivalent), and familiarity with waveguides or waveguide theory. DP

EE 480 Introduction to Biomedical and Clinical Engineering (3) Application of engineering principles and technology to biological and medical problems. Introduction to human anatomy, physiology, medical terminology, clinical measurements. Systems modeling, physiological control systems, computer applications, health-related problems. Pre: 213 and MATH 244 or MATH 253A.

EE 480L Biomedical Engineering Lab (1) (1 3-hr Lab) Measurement of bioelectrical signals, computer and electronic simulation of biological systems, design and evaluation of electronic circuits for biomedical measurements, evaluation of instruments for patient safety. Pre: 323 and 323L. Co-requisite: 480.

EE 481 Bioelectric Phenomena (3) Study of electrical phenomena in living systems. Mechanisms underlying bioelectric activity. Membrane and transepithelial potentials, skin impedance, electrocardiography, neuroelectric signals, diagnostic considerations, laboratory demonstrations. Pre: 480 or consent.

EE 482 Biomedical Instrumentation (3) (2 Lec, 1 3-hr Lab) Principles, applications, and design of biomedical instrumentation. Transducers, IC and microcomputer applications, patient safety. Pre: 326, 480; or consent.

EE 491 (Alpha) Special Topics in Electrical Engineering (3) Course content will reflect special interests of visiting/permanent faculty; to be oriented toward juniors and seniors. (B) artificial intelligence; (C) circuits; (D) communications; (E) computer hardware; (F) computer software; (G) computer vision; (H) control; (I) devices; (J) fields; (K) power. Pre: consent.

EE 494 Provisional Topics (3) Upper division course with subject matter to be announced.

EE 496 Capstone Design Project (V) A significant project that integrates the design content of previous courses and satisfies realistic constraints involving reliability, safety, and economics, as well as aesthetic, ethical and societal aspects of the problem. Repeatable unlimited times. A-F only. Pre: 396 or consent.

EE 499 Directed Reading (V) Investigation of advanced engineering problems. Pre: senior standing and consent.

EE 500 Master’s Plan B/C Studies (1)

EE 601 Graph Theory and Its Applications (3) Graphs and subgraphs, trees and treelike graphs, planar graphs, connectivity and edge-connectivity, applications. Pre: MATH 311 or consent.

EE 602 Algorithm I (3) Design and evaluation of machine representations, techniques and algorithms for sorting, pattern processing, computational geometry, mathematical computations, and engineering applications. Introduction to computational issues of time, space, communication, and program correctness. Pre: 367 or consent.

EE 603 Algorithm II (3) Techniques of parallel and distributed computation. Design and analysis of computational structures and algorithms based on general models of computer architecture. Issues in interprocessor communication and synchronization. Pre: 602, 660; or consent.

EE 604 Artificial Intelligence (3) LISP for machine intelligence applications, or related constraint object and logic-oriented languages. Pre: 467 or knowledge of LISP/PROLOG.

EE 606 Intelligent Autonomous Agents (3) The theory, methods and practical applications of autonomous agent systems, including common applications of both software and hardware (robotic) agents. In-depth practical experience with autonomous agents through programming assignments and projects. Pre: 467 or ICS 313 (or equivalent), graduate standing; or consent. (Cross-listed as ICS 606) (once a year)

EE 607 Advanced Network Algorithms (3) Network algorithms, protocols, and packet switching systems for the internet including TCP/IP, routing algorithms, transmission scheduling, link management, buffer management, and simple network management. Pre: 367 or consent.

EE 608 Optical Networks (3) Propagation of signals in fibers, components, modulation and demodulation, transmission system engineering, network systems and architectures, network design, control and management and packet switching. Pre: 342, 367, and 371; or consent.

EE 615 Advanced Digital Signal Processing (3) An advanced course in digital processing. Topics include fast DFT algorithms, multirate systems and filter banks, power spectrum estimation, linear prediction, optimum linear filters, and adaptive filtering. A-F only. Open to nonmajors for CR/NC only. Pre: 415 or 640, or consent.

EE 616 Digital Image Processing (3) Human visual perception, image formation, sampling and quantization, enhancement and restoration, color image processing, wavelets and multiresolution representations, image and video compression. Pre: 415 or equivalent.

EE 618 Optimization Theory and Practice (3) Dynamic programming, nonlinear optimization, optimal control. Pre: 650.

EE 620 Advanced Electronic Circuits (3) Electronic circuits for precision measurement, computation, and signal processing. Low noise and interference reduction techniques. High-frequency and high-speed techniques. Micro-processor and biomedical applications. Pre: 422.

EE 621 Advanced Solid-State Devices (3) Advanced physical principles and design of modern solid-state electronic devices. Heterostructures, photodetectors, LED, junction lasers, and other devices of current importance identified from the current literature. Pre: 327.

EE 622 Optical Electronics I (3) Fundamentals of optical radiation, including stimulated and spontaneous processes. Optical electronics including opital resonators, lasers, optical detectors, light-guiding, and applications. Pre: 327 or consent.

EE 623 Optical Electronics II (3) Electro-optics, noise detection, light and sound dielectric waveguide phenomena, lasers, optics, phase conjugation. Pre: 622 or consent.

EE 624 Microsensors and Microactuators I (3) Technology methods and physical principles of microsensors and microactuators. Vacuum technology, thin film deposition and characterization techniques, solid mechanics, micromachining, acoustics, piezoelectricity and principles of current microtransducers. Pre: 327 or consent.

EE 625 High-Frequency Solid-State Devices (3) High-frequency semiconductor devices. Hot electrons, Gunn oscillators, IMPATT diodes, mesfets, modfets, micromechanical klystrons, TWTS, magnetrons, resonant tunneling devices, superlattice devices. Pre: 327 or consent.

EE 626 Microsensors and Microactuators II (3) Survey of current microsensors and microactuators; pressure sensors; accelerometers; thermal, chemical, and magnetic sensors; micromotors and transducers. Pre: 624 or consent.

EE 627 Advanced Topics in Physical Electronics (3) Recent developments in phenomena and devices of physical electronics. Pre: 327.

EE 628 Analysis and Design of Integrated Circuits (3) Fabrication constraints and design guidelines for integrated circuits. Nonlinear model of integrated circuit transistor. Design and analysis of integrated logic circuits and linear circuits. Pre: 323.

EE 631 Advanced Power Systems (3) Computer-aided analysis and design of large power systems: modeling, system protection, economic operation, short-circuit analysis, load-flow studies, and transient stability of N-machine systems. Pre: consent.

EE 633 Power Generation and Control (3) Power generation. Power exchange of interconnected areas, control of generation, simulation models and optimum control, power system security, state estimation. Pre: 351 or consent.

EE 640 Applied Random Processes (3) Random variables, multivariate distributions, random sequences, stochastic convergence, stationary and nonstationary processes, spectral analysis, Karhunen-Loeve expansion, Markov processes, mean square estimation, Kalman filters. Pre: MATH 471 (or equivalent).

EE 641 Queueing Theory (3) Poisson, Markov, and renewal processes, M/G/1 queue, G/M/1 queue, queueing networks, simulation, and performance evaluation of computer systems and communication networks. Pre: 342, 640 (or concurrent); or consent.

EE 642 Detection and Estimation Theory (3) Fundamentals of signal detection and estimation theory. Hypothesis testing, parametric and nonparametric detection, sequential detection, parametric estimation, linear estimation, robust detection and estimation, and applications to communication systems. Pre: 640.

EE 643 Communication System Performance (3) Fundamental performance limits, signal detection and estimation, modulation, intersymbol interference, equalization adaptive filtering, sequence detection, synchronization, fading multipath channels, spread spectrum. Pre: 640.

EE 644 Computer Communication Networks (3) Fundamentals of computer communication networks including modeling, performance evaluation, routing, flow control, local area networks, distributed algorithms, and optimization algorithms. Pre: 342, MATH 471; or consent.

EE 645 Neural Nets and Learning Theory (3) Pattern recognition, neural networks, and machine learning. Discriminant functions, super-vised and unsupervised learning, associative memories, feed forward and recurrent networks, learning complexity, computational learning theory and applications. Pre: 640.

EE 646 Advanced Information Theory (3) Measure of information, coding for discrete sources, discrete memoryless channels and capacity, the noisy channel coding theorem, source coding with fidelity criterion, rate-distortion theory, multiuser channels. Pre: 640.

EE 647 Source Coding (3) Theory and applications of source coding, rate-distortion theory, companding, lattice coding, tree coding, trellis coding, entropy-constrained coding, asymptotic theory, predictive and differential encoding, combined source/channel coding, vector quantization. Pre: 640.

EE 648 Error-Control Coding I (3) Linear block codes, soft and hard decision decodings, correction of random errors, cyclic codes, BCH codes, Reed-Solomon codes, majority logic decodable codes, burst-error correcting codes, concatenated codes. Pre: MATH 311 or consent.

EE 649 Error-Control Coding II (3) Convolutional codes, Viterbi algorithm, coded modulation, multistage decoding, concatenated coded modulation, probablistic decoding, turbo codes, low density parity check codes and iterative decoding. Pre: 648.

EE 650 Linear System Theory (3) State space theory of linear systems, controllability, observability, stability, irreducible realizations. Pre: 452.

EE 651 Nonlinear Control Systems (3) Digital simulations, phase-plane analysis, limit cycles and amplitude bounds, Lyapunov’s theorem, circle criterion of stability, lure systems, Popov’s stability theorem. Pre: 650.

EE 652 Optimal Control Systems (3) Optimal controls introduced through parametric optimization, calculus of variations, Euler-Lagrange and Hamilton-Jacobi equations, Pontryagin’s maximum principle, minimum-time and minimum-fuel problems, dynamic programming, applications. Pre: 650 or consent.

EE 655 Robust Control (3) Multivariable frequency response design, signals and systems, linear fractional transformations, LQG Control, Full Information H-infinity Controller Synthesis, H-infinity filtering, model reduction, the four-block problem. Pre: 453 and 650.

EE 660 Computer Architecture I (3) Models of computation, high-performance processors, pipelined machines, RISC processors, VLIW, superscalar and fine-grain parallel machines. Data-flow architectures. Hardware/software tradeoffs. Pre: 461.

EE 661 Computer Architecture II (3) Design principles and techniques for architecture of parallel processing computers, processors, memories, interprocessor communication mechanism, multiprocessor scheduling and synchronization. Pre: 660 or consent.

EE 665 Computer Systems (3) Modern operating system software, process communication, distributed systems, device drivers. Software development and maintenance, integration of software packages. Projects reflecting special interests of faculty. Pre: 461 and 468.

EE 668 Telecommunication Networks (3) Telecommunication-network architecture; switching, broadcast, and wireless networks; protocols, interfaces, routing, flow- and congestion-control techniques; intelligent network architecture; service creation capabilities; multimedia, voice, data, and video networks and services. Pre: 468 or consent.

EE 671 Electromagnetic Theory and Applications (3) Solutions of Maxwell’s equations and applications to radiation and propagation of electromagnetic waves. Pre: 372 or consent.

EE 673 Advanced Microwave Engineering (3) Advanced RF and microwave circuit design for wireless applications. Pre: 473 or consent.

EE 680 Biomedical Engineering Systems (3) Systems analysis and electronic instrumentation methods in biomedicine. Network and control-loop modeling, computer simulation, biological transducers, and analysis of electronic and physiological systems. Pre: 326, 326L, and 371; or consent.

EE 691 Seminar in Electrical Engineering (1) CR/NC only. Pre: graduate standing and consent.

EE 692 Seminar in Electrical Engineering (1) CR/NC only. Pre: graduate standing and consent.

EE 693 (Alpha) Special Topics in Electrical Engineering (3) Course content will reflect special interests of visiting/permanent faculty. (B) artificial intelligence; (C) circuits; (D) communications; (E) computer hardware; (F) computer software; (G) computer vision; (H) control; (I) devices; (J) fields; (K) power. Pre: consent.

EE 699 Directed Reading or Research (V) Repeatable unlimited times. CR/NC only. Pre: graduate standing and consent.

EE 700 Thesis Research (V) Research for master’s thesis. Pre: candidacy for MS in electrical engineering.

EE 790 Directed Instruction (V) Student assists in undergraduate classroom and/or project instruction under direction and close supervision of faculty member. CR/NC only. Pre: admission to PhD candidacy.

EE 800 Dissertation Research (V) Research for doctoral dissertation. Pre: candidacy for PhD in electrical engineering.