Prospective undergraduates are welcomed to the School of Computer Science for an undergraduate visiting day.
Event details
- When: 3rd April 2013 14:00 - 15:30
- Format: Visiting Day
Prospective undergraduates are welcomed to the School of Computer Science for an undergraduate visiting day.
Prospective undergraduates are welcomed to the School of Computer Science for an undergraduate visiting day.
Prospective undergraduates are welcomed to the School of Computer Science for an undergraduate visiting day.
Prospective undergraduates are welcomed to the School of Computer Science for an undergraduate visiting day.
Prospective undergraduates are welcomed to the School of Computer Science for an undergraduate visiting day.
Prospective undergraduates are welcomed to the School of Computer Science for an undergraduate visiting day.
Per Ola Kristensson has two recent papers published in top ACM conferences that have received honourable mentions:
Congratulations to Lei Fang, one of our SICSA postgrads, on winning the best student poster award at the recent International Workshop on Self-Organising Systems (IWSOS) in Delft NL.
The poster (PDF), entitled “Towards self-management in WSNs by exploiting a spatio-temporal model”, presents early work on using statistical methods to find and exploit correlations between the observations made by nodes in a wireless sensor network. The aim is to use these correlations to detect errors, improve calibration and reduce data traffic.
Systems Seminar – by John Thomson
All wecome.
The Results Delusion
Abstract:
It is often said that any subject which requires the word ‘science’ to be placed somewhere in its name, is unlikely to be very scientific. This is unfortunately far too true for systems research in general. Every systems conference, papers are presented which show significant speedups over previous approaches to problem X, but these improvements are rarely replicated in output from industry. Why? The unpalatable answer is that a significant amount of systems research is the result of self-delusion, bad science and, I suspect occasionally, fraud.
Standards of scientific rigour in CS often fall well below what would be taken for granted in other sciences – particularly with regard to measurement of results, statistical analysis and replicability of results. I would like to do something about this, and will be presenting the idea for a new CS journal, which focuses on this exact problem. Oh, and peer review is gone too! Pitfalls abound. Would love to hear your comments, objections and advice.
The Jack Cole building was officially opened by the then First Minister Jack McConnell on the 18th March 2005. The building was named after the founder of Computer Science at St Andrews. Read more about the opening in the university news archives.
Read more about Jack Cole and view pictures of the reception held after the opening.