VS265: Homework assignments: Difference between revisions
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* [http://redwood.berkeley.edu/vs265/lab1.pdf lab1.pdf] | * [http://redwood.berkeley.edu/vs265/lab1.pdf lab1.pdf] | ||
* [http://redwood.berkeley.edu/vs265/data.mat data.mat] | |||
<!--[http://redwood.berkeley.edu/w/images/e/ef/Hw1_soln_bilenko.pdf Solution.pdf] --> | <!--[http://redwood.berkeley.edu/w/images/e/ef/Hw1_soln_bilenko.pdf Solution.pdf] --> |
Revision as of 03:48, 5 September 2014
Students are encouraged to work in groups, but turn in assignments individually, listing the group members they worked with.
Submission instructions: email both a PDF of your solutions as well as your code (.m or .py files) as attachments to:
vs265 AT rctn.org
You can hand in a paper copy of your solutions before class, but you still have to email your code to the address above before the assignment is due.
Resources
Matlab
Student version of Matlab ($50) may be obtained here.
There is an excellent guide to Matlab by Kevin Murphy on the web: http://code.google.com/p/yagtom/
Python
Fernando Perez at the Brain Imaging Center has an excellent set of resources on Python for scientific computing. You will likely find the "Starter Kit" particularly useful.
Also, a great starting point for all scientific python is using Anaconda [1]