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Undergraduate Program
The Computer Engineering curriculum is designed to cover the engineering
aspects of both hardware and software -- a total computer systems
perspective.
All computer engineering students take courses in the following areas:
electrical circuits, electronics, digital circuits, computer
architecture ranging from microcomputers to mainframes,
interfacing, programming languages ranging from assembler to
high level, data structures, analysis of algorithms,
operating systems, software engineering, and microcomputer systems.
A solid foundation in the basic sciences of physics, chemistry,
and mathematics is used to support these courses.
There are two distinct tracks in this curriculum, the
Electrical and Computer Engineering Track (ECE) and the Computer Science Track (CS),
both culminating in the same Computer Engineering degree.
The tracks are substantially similar, each providing a broad
coverage of the computer engineering discipline,
but each has a slightly different emphasis.
Note that students in either track can take courses from the
other as electives, or they can use their electives to further
specialize within their own track. Although students are
required to select a track immediately upon entering the
Computer Engineering program, it is usually possible to
change tracks as late as the junior year.
The ECE track of the Computer Engineering
degree places stronger emphasis on digital
Very Large Scale Integrated (VLSI) circuits and systems,
microprocessor interfacing and system design, and computer system
architecture and design. The track is primarily administered by
the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering and is designed to
encompass nearly all of the core material of the Electrical Engineering
degree but provides much more depth in computing than is
possible within the context of an Electrical Engineering degree.
The CS track of the Computer Engineering degree
provides students the freedom to enhance their knowledge in the
broad range of topics comprising Computer Engineering:
computer networks, computer architecture, artificial intelligence,
computer graphics, robotics, real-time computing,
computer languages, microcomputers, VLSI, and large-scale hardware
and software systems. The track is primarily administered by the
Department of Computer Science and encompasses nearly all of the
core material of the Computer Science degree, but its greater emphasis
on design and engineering fundamentals prepares the student for
registration as a professional engineer.
Throughout this program, the student works with state-of-the-art
computers and laboratory equipment and is exposed to the most recent
analytical techniques and technological developments.
Significant association with the program's faculty,
who are actively engaged in research and professional
consulting activities, serves to acquaint the student with the
opportunities and rewards available to the practicing
Computer Engineering professional.
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