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Computer Science Engineering

SEMERSTER VIII

UNIVERSITY OF JAMMU, JAMMU

COURSE SCHEME
FOR B.E. 8TH SEMESTER COMPUTER ENGINEERING.
FOR EXAMINATION TO BE HELD FOR BATCH 2014 & ONWARDS

Course No.

Name of the Course

Hours Per Week

Marks

L

T

P

Theory

Sessional

Practical

Total

(ELECTIVE-I)
HUM-812

A)  Organizational Behavior.
B)   Business Policy and Strategy management

3

2

--

100

50

--

 

150

(ELECTIVE-II)
COM- 801

  1. Advanced Computer Architecture
  2. Data Warehousing & Data Mining

3

2

--

100

50

--

 

 

150

COM-802

Artificial Intelligence (for Computer Engg.)

3

2

--

100

50

--

 

150

(ELECTIVE-III) COM-803

  1. Compiler Design
  2. Distributed Databases

3

2

--

100

50

--

 

150

COM-804

Major Project.

--

--

12

 

--

400

400

 

Total

 

12

 

8

 

12

 

400

 

200

 

400

 

1000

CLASS : B.E. 8TH SEMESTER
BRANCH : COMPUTER ENGINEERING COURSE NO : HUM-812(A) (ELECTIVE- I)
COURSE TITLE:ORGANIZATIONAL BEHAVIOUR
DURATION OF EXAM :3 HOURS.
L:3 T:2
Marks:THEORY:100 SESSIONAL:50
SECTION A

Unit 1 : Organizational Behavior : Fundamental Concepts, Nature of people, Nature of organization, Features, Need to study O.B, Models of organizational behavior. Motivation-Concept & Importance, Theories of motivation – Maslow’s Need Hierarchy Theory & Herzberg’s Motivation-Hygiene Theory.

Unit 2 : Individual behavior and its determinants : Personality-Concept & Determinants; Perception-Meaning, Definition, Perceptual Process, internal & external factors in perceptual selectivity; Attitude–Features, Components, Formation of Attitudes; OB Modification : Steps in OB Mod & Utility of OB Mod

Unit 3 : Communication : Characteristics, Process, Types, Barriers & Breakdowns in Communication, Overcoming Communication Barriers, Guidelines for Effective Communication.

SECTION B

Unit 4 : Organization as a Social system: Concept, Characteristics & Objectives of Organization Development, Organization Development Process. Organizational Change: Nature of Organizational Change, Forces to Change, Causes of Resistance to Change, Techniques of overcoming Resistance to Change, Response & Reactions to Change

Unit 5 : Leadership and Organization Development: Leadership–Characteristics and Functions of Leader, Qualities of a good Leader, Importance of leadership, Styles of Leadership; Dynamics of Conflict – Nature of Conflict, Types of Conflict, Stages in conflict, Resolution of conflicts.

Unit 6 : Culture & Management with Indian reference : Meaning, definition & Elements of culture, Characteristics of organizational culture, Functions of Culture in Management, Basic Foundations of Indian Culture and its linkage with the practice of management in India.    

BOOKS RECOMMENDED :
Organisational Behaviour-John W. Newstrom & Keith Davis
Organisational Behaviour-Robbins
Management-G. S. Sudha
Principles of Management-Dr. Neeru Vaisisth
Organisational Behaviour-L. M. Prasad

NOTE:There will be eight questions of 20 marks each, four from each section.  Students are required to attempt five questions selecting atleast two questions from each section.  Use of Calculator is allowed.

.




CLASS:B.E. 8TH SEMESTER
BRANCH:COMPUTER ENGINEERING
COURSE NO:HUM-812(B) (ELECTIVE-I)
COURSE TITLE:BUSINESS POLICY AND STRATEGIC MANAGEMENT
DURATION OF EXAM:3 HOURS.

 

L :3 T:2
MARKS:THEORY:100  SESSIONAL:50

SECTION A

Introduction to business policy, the corporate strategy – concepts and objectives, formulation of corporate strategy, environmental scanning opportunity and threats.

Corporate profile strategies and weakness strategic alterations, concepts of distinction competence, strategy and personnel values, strategy and social values,  strategy and technological change of choice or strategy and corporate planning in India.
SECTION B
Implementation of strategy, strategy and organizations design, mobilization of physical and human resources management information and control.

Role of motivation, corporate culture and organizational commitment, mergers and acquisitions, Performance appraisal.

Leadership and its various styles, stress, evaluation of strategy, strategic management in the non- profit organizations, strategic management in international environment.

BOOKS RECOMMENDED:

1.Strategic Management and Business Policy Gluck, William F
2.Policy Formulation and Strategy Management Sehellenberger, Rober &
Bozeman, F. Glenn

3.Business Policy for Indian Industries.Chopra, K.S.

4.Business Policy and Planning Rogers, David C.D.

5.Strategy and Policy Thompson, Arthur A & Strickland, A.J.

NOTE:There will be eight questions of 20 marks each, four from each section.  Students are   required to attempt five questions selecting at least two questions from each section.  Use of Calculator is allowed.


CLASS:B.E. 8TH SEMESTER
BRANCH:COMPUTER ENGINEERING
COURSE NO:COM-801(A) (ELECTIVE-II)
COURSE TITLE:ADVANCED COMPUTER ARCHITECTURE
DURATION OF EXAM:3 HOURS.
 L:3 T:2
MARKS:THEORY :100 SESSIONAL:50
SECTION A
Introduction to Parallel Processing : Parallel Processing, Architectural classification schemes, Parallelism in Uniprocessor systems, Types of Parallelism
Pipelining Processing : Introduction to pipelining, Classification of Pipeline Processors, General pipelines and reservation tables, Principles of Designing pipeline processors, Pipeline hazards and conflicts.
Vector and SIMD Array Processing: Introduction to Vector Processing, Classification of vector Processing, Vector computing process, Characteristics of vector Processing. Array Processors, Classification of Array Processors, Masking and Data Routing Mechanisms.
SECTION B
Multiprocessor Systems : Introduction to multi processors, Classification of multi processors systems,  Processor characteristics for multiprocessing, Multi processor execution modes, Multi processor operating system, Interconnected Networks for multiprocessors and Multi-computer, Performance evaluation methods.
Parallel Memory Organization: Memory organization in multi processor systems, Interleaved Memory Organization, Characterization  and organization of cache memory, Multicache Problems, Virtual memory concepts and techniques, input- output organization, Characteristics of input- output systems, input- output processor.
Parallel computer models and Program Parallelism : Models of parallel computers, Introduction to Parallel Algorithms, Parallel Programming Paradigms, Issues in implementing algorithms on Parallel Computers.

BOOKS RECOMMENDED:

              1. Computer Architecture: A Qualitative Approach Hennessey & D.A. Patterson.

 

              1. Computer Architecture: Pipelined & Parallel Michael J. Flynn.

Processor Design

              1. Advanced Computer Architecture Kai Hwang & Briggs.

 

              1. Foundations of Parallel Processing R.K.Ghose, Rajan Moona and Phalguni Gupta.

Note:There  will be eight  questions of 20 marks each spread over the whole syllabus, students have to attempt five questions selecting  at least two questions from each sections.




CLASS: BE 8TH SEMESTER
BRANCH: COMPUTER ENGINEERING
COURSE NO: COM-801(B) (ELECTIVE-II)
COURSE TITLE: DATA WAREHOUSING & DATA MINING
DURATION OF EXAM: 3 HOURS.
L:3 T: 2
MARKS: THEORY:100 SESSIONAL:50
SECTION A

Introduction to Data Warehousing & Data Mining: Need for data Warehousing & Data Mining, Data Mining  on different kinds of  Data, Data Mining Functionalities - Characterization and  Discrimination, Association Analysis, Classification and  Prediction, Cluster  Analysis, Outlier Analysis, Evolution Analysis, Classification of Data Mining   System,  Data Mining Applications. 

Data Warehouse and OLAP Technology for  Data Mining: Differences between Operational database systems and Datawarehouse, Multidimensional Data Model- Data Cubes, Star, Snowflakes & Fact Constellations Schemes, Concept  Hierarchies, OLAP Operations, Starnet Query Model, Data Warehouse, 3-Tier Architecture, Types of OLAP Servers: ROLAP, MOLAP, HOLAP, Data Warehouse Usage, On-Line Analytical Processing to On-Line Analytical Mining, Data Marts, Meta Data.   

SECTION B

Data Preprocessing and Mining: Data Cleaning, Data Integration & Transformation, Data Reduction, Discretization and Concept Hierarchy Generation.   

Kinds of Knowledge to be Mined, Concept Hierarchies, Interesting measures, Presentation & Visualization of Discovered Patterns.

Concept Description and Association Rules Mining: Concept Description, Data Generalization and Summarization based Characterization, Analytical Characterization, Attribute Relevance Analysis.
Association Rules Mining Basic Concepts, Mining Single Dimensional Boolean Association Rules from Transactional databases- Apriori Algorithm

Intoduction to classification and Prediction: Basic Concepts, Classification by Decision Tree Induction, Linear and multiple Regression, Non Linear Regression

BOOKS RECOMMENDED:

  1. Data Mining: Concepts & Techniques :Jiawei Hun, Micheline Kamber
  2. Modern Data Warehousing   Mining & :George M. Marakas

Visualization Core Concept

  1. Data Mining :Pieter Adrians
  2. Data Mining with Microsoft SQL Server:Seidman

NOTE :There will be eight questions of 20 marks each, four from each section.  Students are   required to attempt five questions selecting atleast two questions from each section.  Use of Calculator is allowed.

 



CLASS:B.E. 8TH SEMESTER
BRANCH:COMPUTER ENGINEERING
COURSE NO: COM-802
COURSE TITLE: ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE
DURATION OF EXAM: 3 HOURS.

L:3      T:2  MARKS
THEORY:100     SESSIONAL:50
SECTION A

Artificial Intelligence:- The AI problems, AI techniques, The level of the model, criteria for success, AI tasks. Problems, problem spaces & Research:- Defining the problem as a space, search, production system problem characteristics, Production system characteristics, Issues in the design of search programs, two path problems.

Symbolic reasoning under uncertainty:-  Introduction to non - monotonic Reasoning,  Logics  for non-monotonic reasoning, Implementation Issues, Augmenting a Problem  Solver. Implementation   by :

  • Depth - First Search  b) Breadth - First Search                                                              

Statistical reasoning :- Probability & Bayes  Theorem, Certainty Factors & Rules Based Systems, Bayesian networks, Dempster Shafer Theory, Fuzzy logic,  Introduction to  Expert System development.

SECTION B

Using Predicate logic:-  Representing simple facts, Its Logic representing instances  and  its relationship , Computable  Functions & Predicates, Resolution, Natural Deduction, Conversion to Clause Form.
Representing knowledge using rules:-Procedural Vs Declarative Knowledge, Logic Programming Forward Vs Backward Searching, Matching, Control Knowledge.Heuristic Search Techniques :- Generate & test, Hill Climbing, Best First Search, Problem reduction, Constraint, Satisfaction, Means and analysis.
Knowledge Representation Issues:- Representation and mappings, approaches to knowledge   representation, Issues of   knowledge representation, the frame problem, Semantic networks.                                                                                                              

BOOKS RECOMMENDED :

  • Artificial Intelligence Elaine Rich Kevin Knight
  • Principles of A.I Expert system development David W. Rolston.

 

NOTE :There will be eight questions of 20 marks each, four from each section.  Students are   required to attempt five questions selecting atleast two questions from each section.  Use of Calculator is allowed.


 



CLASS:BE 8TH SEMESTER
BRANCH:COMPUTER ENGINEERING
COURSE NO: COM-803(A) (ELECTIVE-III)
COURSE TITLE: COMPILER DESIGN
DURATION OF EXAM: 3 HOURS.L:3 T :2 
MARKS: THEORY:100 SESSIONAL:50
SECTION A
 Introduction–Languages Processors, the typical structure of a Complier.
 Programming Language – High level programming languages, definition of programming languages, the syntax and semantics of basic data and control structures in high level programming languages.
Lexical analysis – Role of  Lexical  Analyzer ,Input buffering, A simple approach to Design of Lexical Analyzers, Regular Expressions ,Finite Automata, Regular expression to Finite Automata, Conversion of NFA to DFA, Minimizing the number of states of a DFA .
The Syntactic Specification of Programming Languages – Definition of Grammars (Context free grammar), derivation, parse tree, ambiguity, non-context free language constructs.
Basics Parsing Techniques – Parsers- Shift reduce parsing, Operator precedence parsing, top -down parsing, Predicative parsers, LR parsers.
SECTION B
Syntax directed translation- Syntax directed translation schemes. Implementation of syntax directed translators.
Intermediate code Generation - Intermediate code, postfix notation, three address code- quadruples triples, translation of Assignment statement, Boolean Expression, Statements that alter the flow of control.
Symbol Table Organization – The content of symbol table, Data structure of symbol table
Run- Time memory allocation -Static and Dynamic memory allocation, Static allocation of space – Activation trees, activation records, Procedure calls, parameter passing.
Error Detection and Recovery-Errors, lexical phase errors, syntactic phase errors, semantic errors.
Code optimization- Loop optimization, DAG Representation of basic blocks, Global data flow Analysis. Code generation- Issues in the design of code generator, Peephole optimization, a simple code generator Register Allocation & Assignment.
BOOKS RECOMMENDED:

  • Principles of compiler design:Alfred V.Aho, Jeffrey D Ullman
  • Principles of compiler design :Aho  v. Ullman, Sethi
  • Theory of parsing Translation & Compiling:Aho. ullman
  • Compiler construction:Munish Jha
  • Compilers Principles, Techniques & Tools Alfred V. Aho, Monika S Lam,Ravi Sethi, Jeffrey D Ullman

NOTE:There will be eight questions of 20 marks each, four from each section.  Students are required to attempt five questions selecting atleast two questions from each section.  Use of Calculator is allowed.



CLASS:B.E.8TH SEMESTER
BRANCH: COMPUTER ENGINEERING
COURSE NO: COM-803(B) (ELECTIVE-III)
COURSE TITLE: DISTRIBUTED DATABASE
DURATION OF EXAM: 3 HOURS.

L:3  T:2 MARKS
THEORY:100 SESSIONAL:50
 

SECTION A

Transaction and schedules, concurrent execution of transaction, conflict and views serializability, testing for serializability, concepts in recoverable and cascadeless schedules.

Lock based protocols, time stamp based protocols, multiple granularity and multiversion techniques, enforcing serializability for locks, locking system with multiple lock modes, architecture for locking scheduler.

Distributed transaction management, data distribution, fragmentation and replication techniques, distributed commit, distributed locking schemes, long duration transactions, moss concurrency protocol.

SECTION B

Issues of recovery and atomicity in distributed database, traditional recovery technique, log based recovery, recovery with concurrent transactions, recovery in message passing systems, checkpoints, algorithm for recovery line, concepts in orphan and inconsistent messages.

Distributed query processing, multiway joins, semi joins, cost based query, optimization for distributed database, updating replicated data, protocols for distributed deadlocks detection, eager and lazy replication techniques.

BOOKS RECOMMENDED:

  1. Principles of distributed database systems:M Tamer Ozsu Patrick Valdureiz.
  2. Distributed database system :David A. Bell, Jane B.Grimson
  3. Managing Distributed Database :Donald K. Burleson
  4. Advanced Distributed Systems: Felix F. Romas

 

NOTE:There will be eight questions of 20 marks each, four from each section.  Students are   required to attempt five questions selecting atleast two questions from each section.  Use of Calculator is allowed.

     




CLASS :B.E. 8TH SEMESTER
BRANCH :COMPUTER ENGINEERING
COURSE NO.COM–804
COURSE TITLE :MAJOR PROJECT
L :0 T:0 P :12  MARKS:40 

The student will complete their assigned project work initiated in 7th semester under course No.COM-708 and submit a detailed project report individually to the Head of the department.

Guidelines for evaluation of Project work in 8th semester:
There shall be a mid semester evaluation, followed by a End Semester (Final) Evaluation

Sub-distribution of marks:

  • For External Examiner:100

 

  • For Internal Examiner :300 

Sub-distribution of internal Marks:

  • Mark distribution of internal Project work as per the University statues

shall be based on:

a.Viva-Voce =90 30%
b.Presentation=90 30%
c. Report =120 40%

Total = 300

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