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* How about less review of ECE301 and ECE302 material so we can do more speech/sound/image processing instead? --[[User:Mboutin|Mboutin]] 16:08, 28 April 2009 (UTC)
 
* How about less review of ECE301 and ECE302 material so we can do more speech/sound/image processing instead? --[[User:Mboutin|Mboutin]] 16:08, 28 April 2009 (UTC)
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*I think you can definitely cut down on some of the review material.  All of the CTFT, DTFT, and ZT stuff could probably have been grouped in one homework, maybe two if you incorporate sampling.  I'd imagine all of that, plus DFT, FFT, and circular convolution could be covered by the first exam.  Next maybe a short review of 302 material, then have the second exam be all speech processing and the third all image processing.  With regards to the "quiz" we had on Wednesday, I enjoyed learning both speech and image processing and would hate to have to sacrifice one for the other.  One thing to keep in mind when changing the structure of the class, however, is the labs.  It's painful when a class and it's lab don't correlate, so if you change the material significantly the labs may become obsolete (unless, of course, you rewrite them).  Other than that the more practical the material, the more interesting it is.  --[[User:Pjcannon|Pjcannon]] 11:20, 1 May 2009 (UTC)

Revision as of 06:22, 1 May 2009

  • I would suggest that in the future more test problems be broken up into parts (a,b,c, etc). That way, it may be possible to demonstrate understanding of part of a topic and receive part of the credit. I understand that partial credit is given on long problems, but I feel that this credit would be more fairly distributed if certain parts of the problem were assigned different point values.--Jwromine 23:12, 23 April 2009 (UTC)
  • Since we did LPC in the lab without going over the details of solutions in class, I would prefer to learn the math behind the two methods before doing it in lab.
  • How about less review of ECE301 and ECE302 material so we can do more speech/sound/image processing instead? --Mboutin 16:08, 28 April 2009 (UTC)
  • I think you can definitely cut down on some of the review material. All of the CTFT, DTFT, and ZT stuff could probably have been grouped in one homework, maybe two if you incorporate sampling. I'd imagine all of that, plus DFT, FFT, and circular convolution could be covered by the first exam. Next maybe a short review of 302 material, then have the second exam be all speech processing and the third all image processing. With regards to the "quiz" we had on Wednesday, I enjoyed learning both speech and image processing and would hate to have to sacrifice one for the other. One thing to keep in mind when changing the structure of the class, however, is the labs. It's painful when a class and it's lab don't correlate, so if you change the material significantly the labs may become obsolete (unless, of course, you rewrite them). Other than that the more practical the material, the more interesting it is. --Pjcannon 11:20, 1 May 2009 (UTC)

Alumni Liaison

Sees the importance of signal filtering in medical imaging

Dhruv Lamba, BSEE2010