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{{CourseHeader
 
{{CourseHeader
     | code = 2-IKV-102
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     | code = 2-IKVa-102
     | title = Introduction to Computational Intelligence
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     | title = Mathematics for Cognitive Science
 
}}
 
}}
 
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oneself.
 
oneself.
  
{{Infolist|2-IKV-102|Course information sheet >}}
+
== Course schedule ==
 +
{| class="alternative table-responsive"
 +
!Type
 +
!Day
 +
!Time
 +
!Room
 +
!Lecturer
 +
|-
 +
|Lecture/Exercise
 +
|Tuesday
 +
|08:10
 +
|M-I
 +
|[[Martina Babinská|Martina Babinská]]
 +
|-
 +
|Exercise/Lecture
 +
|Thursday
 +
|11:30
 +
|M-III
 +
|[[Martina Babinská|Martina Babinská]]
 +
|}
  
[[{{NAMESPACE}}:{{ROOTPAGENAME}}/sk|This page is available only in Slovak]]
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== Syllabus ==
 +
 
 +
{| class="alternative table-responsive"
 +
!Date
 +
!Topic
 +
!References
 +
|-
 +
|24.09.
 +
|Introduction. The set of numbers, cardinality, the set theory.
 +
|Discrete and combinatorial mathematics: An applied introduction / Ralph P. Grimaldi.
 +
Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology: Pearson, 2004; chap. 3
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|26.09.
 +
|The basics of logic: statement vs. sentence.
 +
|Discrete and combinatorial mathematics: An applied introduction / Ralph P. Grimaldi.
 +
Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology: Pearson, 2004; chap. 2
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|01.10.
 +
|The basics of logic: primitive vs. compound statement, conjunction, disjunction, implication, biconditional, quantifiers.
 +
|Discrete and combinatorial mathematics: An applied introduction / Ralph P. Grimaldi.
 +
Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology: Pearson, 2004; chap. 2
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|03.10.
 +
|The basics of logic: Negation. Logical Equivalence. Contradiction and tautology.
 +
|Discrete and combinatorial mathematics: An applied introduction / Ralph P. Grimaldi.
 +
Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology: Pearson, 2004; chap. 2
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|08.10.
 +
|Mathematical Rows: Sum and multiplication. Mathematical notation.
 +
|Discrete and combinatorial mathematics: An applied introduction / Ralph P. Grimaldi.
 +
Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology: Pearson, 2004; chap. 4.1
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|10.10.
 +
|Proving methods in mathematics: Constructive proof, direct proof and mathematical Induction. Indirect/contrapositive proof. Contradiction.
 +
|Discrete and combinatorial mathematics: An applied introduction / Ralph P. Grimaldi.
 +
Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology: Pearson, 2004; chap. 4.1
 +
 
 +
|}
 +
 
 +
== References ==
 +
 
 +
* Discrete and combinatorial mathematics: An applied introduction / Ralph P. Grimaldi.
 +
Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology: Pearson, 2004. [https://www.scribd.com/doc/119851254/Discrete-and-Combinatorial-Mathematics-An-Applied-Introduction-5th-Ed-R-Grimaldi-Pearson-2004-WWW Download here];
 +
* Basics of Mathematical Functions: https://www.khanacademy.org/math/algebra/algebra-functions
 +
* Calculus / Gilbert Strang. Massachusetts Institute of Technology: Wellesley-Cambridge Press. [https://ocw.mit.edu/ans7870/resources/Strang/Edited/Calculus/Calculus.pdf Download here];
 +
* Fundamentals of Linear Algebra / James B. Carrell. Canada: University of British Colombia, 2005. [https://www.math.ubc.ca/~carrell/NB.pdf Download here];
 +
* Artificial Intelligence: A Modern Approach / Stuart Russell and Peter Norvig. The USA: Pearson, 2010. [http://dai.fmph.uniba.sk/courses/ICI/russell-norvig.AI-modern-approach.3rd-ed.2010.pdf Download here];
 +
 
 +
== Course grading ==
 +
<b>To be classified student has to achieve at least 50% of every activity:</b>
 +
 
 +
PROJECT 
 +
* form: essay, presentation, song or movie
 +
* topic: Me and Mathematics: what does mathematics mean for me?
 +
* term: 05.12.2019
 +
* goal: self-study motivation
 +
* weight: 15%
 +
 
 +
WEEKLY EXAMS AND HOMEWORK
 +
*form: 10-15 minutes writing tests
 +
*term: every Tuesday at the beginning of the exercise
 +
*goal:  regular preparation
 +
*weight: 25%
 +
 
 +
MIDDLE TERM EXAM
 +
*form: 90 minutes writing test (student can choose from the offered task sets)
 +
*term: 12.11.2019
 +
*goal: progress definition
 +
*weight: 15%
 +
 
 +
ATTENDANCE, ACTIVITY (bonus points. max 15%)
 +
*form: class work (solving problems and schoolmate’s help)
 +
*term: every lecture and exercise
 +
*goal:  regular preparation, cooperation and social activity
 +
*weight: 15%
 +
 
 +
FINAL EXAM
 +
*form: 90 minutes writing test
 +
*term: January, February 2020
 +
*goal: course output 
 +
*weight: 30%
 +
 
 +
 
 +
<b>OVERALL GRADING:</b>  A > 90%, B > 80%, C> 70%, D > 60%, E > 52% points.
 +
 
 +
 
 +
 
 +
== Information list ==
 +
{{Infolist|2-IKV-102|Course information sheet >}}

Verzia zo dňa a času 09:49, 10. október 2019

Mathematics for Cognitive Science 2-IKVa-102

The lectures will provide students with basics of propositional and predicate logic, linear algebra, mathematical analysis, and probability that are important for the study of informatics and its role in (computational) cognitive science. At the same time, students will learn about mathematical culture, notation, way of thinking and expressing oneself.

Course schedule

Type Day Time Room Lecturer
Lecture/Exercise Tuesday 08:10 M-I Martina Babinská
Exercise/Lecture Thursday 11:30 M-III Martina Babinská

Syllabus

Date Topic References
24.09. Introduction. The set of numbers, cardinality, the set theory. Discrete and combinatorial mathematics: An applied introduction / Ralph P. Grimaldi.

Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology: Pearson, 2004; chap. 3

26.09. The basics of logic: statement vs. sentence. Discrete and combinatorial mathematics: An applied introduction / Ralph P. Grimaldi.

Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology: Pearson, 2004; chap. 2

01.10. The basics of logic: primitive vs. compound statement, conjunction, disjunction, implication, biconditional, quantifiers. Discrete and combinatorial mathematics: An applied introduction / Ralph P. Grimaldi.

Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology: Pearson, 2004; chap. 2

03.10. The basics of logic: Negation. Logical Equivalence. Contradiction and tautology. Discrete and combinatorial mathematics: An applied introduction / Ralph P. Grimaldi.

Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology: Pearson, 2004; chap. 2

08.10. Mathematical Rows: Sum and multiplication. Mathematical notation. Discrete and combinatorial mathematics: An applied introduction / Ralph P. Grimaldi.

Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology: Pearson, 2004; chap. 4.1

10.10. Proving methods in mathematics: Constructive proof, direct proof and mathematical Induction. Indirect/contrapositive proof. Contradiction. Discrete and combinatorial mathematics: An applied introduction / Ralph P. Grimaldi.

Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology: Pearson, 2004; chap. 4.1

References

  • Discrete and combinatorial mathematics: An applied introduction / Ralph P. Grimaldi.

Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology: Pearson, 2004. Download here;

Course grading

To be classified student has to achieve at least 50% of every activity:

PROJECT

  • form: essay, presentation, song or movie
  • topic: Me and Mathematics: what does mathematics mean for me?
  • term: 05.12.2019
  • goal: self-study motivation
  • weight: 15%

WEEKLY EXAMS AND HOMEWORK

  • form: 10-15 minutes writing tests
  • term: every Tuesday at the beginning of the exercise
  • goal: regular preparation
  • weight: 25%

MIDDLE TERM EXAM

  • form: 90 minutes writing test (student can choose from the offered task sets)
  • term: 12.11.2019
  • goal: progress definition
  • weight: 15%

ATTENDANCE, ACTIVITY (bonus points. max 15%)

  • form: class work (solving problems and schoolmate’s help)
  • term: every lecture and exercise
  • goal: regular preparation, cooperation and social activity
  • weight: 15%

FINAL EXAM

  • form: 90 minutes writing test
  • term: January, February 2020
  • goal: course output
  • weight: 30%


OVERALL GRADING: A > 90%, B > 80%, C> 70%, D > 60%, E > 52% points.


Information list

Course information sheet >