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B.Tech. Degree Programme Computer Science & Engineering

B.Tech. Degree Programme Computer Science & Engineering

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Lingaya’s University, FaridabadPREREQUISITESKnowledge of Artificial Intelligence and PROLOG1. INTRODUCTION TO EXPERT SYSTEM:Introduction; characteristics; development of expertsystem technology; applications and domains;languages, shells and tools; elements, productionsystems.2. THE REPRESENTATION OF KNOWLEDGE:Introduction; the meaning of knowledge;productions; semantic nets, object-attribute-valuetriples; frames; logic and sets; propositional logic;the first order predicate logic; quantifiers3. EXPERT SYSTEMS ARCHITECTURES:Introduction; rule based system architecture; nonproduction system architectures; dealing withuncertainty; knowledge acquisition and validation;knowledge system building tools4. METHOD OF INFERENCE: Introduction; trees,lattices and graphs; state and problem spaces;rules of inference; first order predicate logic; logicsystems; resolution; resolution systems anddeductions; forward and backward chaining5. REASONING UNDER UNCERTAINTY:Introduction; uncertainty; types of error; errors andinduction; probabilities; hypothetical reasoning andbackward induction; temporal reasoning andmarkov chains; uncertainty in inference chain6. INEXACT REASONING: Introduction; uncertaintyand rules; certainty factors; Dempster–ShaferTheory; approximate reasoning; the state ofuncertaint7. DESIGN OF EXPERT SYSTEM: Introduction;stages in the development of an expert system;errors in development stages; softwareengineering and expert system; the expert systemlife cycle; a detailed life cycle model.TEXT BOOKGiarratano Riley, “Expert Systems: Principles andProgramming”, 3rd Edition, Thomson Brooks/Cole,1989REFERENCE BOOKS1. Darlington K, “The Essence of Expert Systems”,Prentice Hall, 20002. Patterson Dan W., “Introduction to Artificial andExpert Systems”, Prentice Hall of India, 20023. Jean-Louis Ermine, “Expert Systems: Theory andPractice”, Prentice Hall of India, 20014. Waterman Donald A., “A Guide to ExpertSystems”, 1 st edition, Pearson Education, 1986.CS-435ROBOTICSL T P Cr5 0 0 3OBJECTIVEThe goal of the course is to familiarize the students withthe concepts and techniques in robot anipulator control,enough to evaluate, chose, and incorporate robots inengineering systems.PRE-REQUISITESExposure to linear algebra and matrix operations,programming in a high level language1. ROBOTIC MANIPULATION: Automation and robots;classification; application; specification; notations.2. DIRECT KINEMATICS: Dot and cross products,co-ordinate frames; rotations; homogeneous; coordinates;link co-ordination arm equation, (fiveaxisrobot, four axis robot, six axis robot).3. INVERSE KINEMATICS: General properties ofsolutions tool configuration; five axis robots, threefouraxis; six axis robot (inverse kinematics).4. WORKSPACE ANALYSIS AND TRAJECTORYPLANNING WORK: envelop and examples,workspace fixtures; pick and place operations;continuous path motion; interpolated motion,straight-line motion5. ROBOT VISION: Image representation, templatematching; polyhedral objects; Shane analysis,segmentation (thresholding, region labelling, shrinkoperators, swell operators, Euler numbers,perspective transformation, structured illumination,camera calibration).6. TASK PLANNING: Task level programming;uncertainty; configuration; space; gross motion;planning; grasp planning; fine-motion planning;simulation of planer motion; source and goalscenes; task planner simulation.7. MOMENTS OF INERTIA, PRINCIPLES OF NCAND CNC MACHINES.TEXT BOOKShilling Robert, “Fundamentals of Robotics-Analysisand Control”, Prentice Hall of India, 2009.REFERENCE BOOKS1. Fu,Gonzales and Lee, “Robotics”, McGraw Hill, 2009.2. Craig J.J., “Introduction to Robotics”, Prentice Hallof India, 19893. Ghoshal, “8051 Micro Controller & interfacing”,Pearson Education, 20084. Staughard, “Robotics and Artificial Intelligence”,Prentice Hall of India, 2009.5. Grover, Wiess, Nagel and Oderey, “IndustrialRobotics”, McGraw Hill, 2008.6. Stdder Walfram, “Robotics and Mechatronics”,Tata McGraw Hill7. Niku S. B., “Introduction to Robotics”, PearsonEducation, 20018. Klafter R. D., Chmielewski T. A. and Negin M.,“Robot <strong>Engineering</strong>”, Prentice Hall of India, 19949. Mittal R. K. and Nagrath I. J., “Robotics andControl”, Tata McGraw Hill, 2003WEB REFERENCES1. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robotics2. http://www.transitport.net/Lists/Robotics.in.Japan.html3. http://www-formal.stanford.edu/jmc/whatisai/4. http://library.thinkquest.org/2705/CS-436SPEECH RECOGNITION & L T P CrGENERATION 5 0 0 3OBJECTIVEDevelop an understanding of the relationship of vocaltract shapes and physical acoustics to the acousticspeech signal. Use a spectrum analyzer to relate theacoustic speech signal to acoustical processes. Design39

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