2.997 | Spring 2004 | Graduate

Decision Making in Large Scale Systems

Projects

The final project consists of a 10-15 page project report and 15-20 minute presentation. Students have option of working on theory, algorithms and / or applications. Project proposals are submitted midway through the term, with the final project due at the end of the term.

Some representative projects are presented in the table below, courtesy of the student author(s).

TOPICS STUDENTS PROJECTS
Approximate Dynamic Programming (Via Linear Programming) for Stochastic Scheduling Mohamed Mostagir

Nelson Uhan

Paper (PDF) (Courtesy of Mohamed Mostagir and Nelson Uhan. Used with permission.)

Slides (PDF) (Courtesy of Mohamed Mostagir and Nelson Uhan. Used with permission.)

How to choose the State Relevance Weight in the Approximate Linear Programming Approach for Dynamic Programming? Yann Le Tallec

Theophane Weber

Paper (PDF) (Courtesy of Yann Le-Tallec and Theophane Weber. Used with permission.)

Slides (PDF) (Courtesy of Yann Le-Tallec and Theophane Weber. Used with permission.)

Decentralized Strategies for the Assignment Problem Hariharan Lakshmanan Slides (PDF) (Courtesy of Hariharan Lakshamanan. Used with permission.)

Course Info

As Taught In
Spring 2004
Level
Learning Resource Types
Lecture Notes
Projects with Examples
Problem Sets