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TEXT BOOK 1. Grewal, B. S., &quot;Higher Engineering Mathematics&quot;, 4th Edition, Khanna Publishers, 2007. REFERENCES 1. Bali, N. P, and Manish Goyal., &quot;A Textbook of Engineering Mathematics&quot;, 7th Edition, Laxmi publications private ltd, 2008. 2. Ramana, B. V., &quot;Higher Engineering Mathematics&quot;, 2nd Edition, TMH publishing company limited, 2008. 3. Glyn James., &quot;Advanced Modern Engineering Mathematics&quot;, 3rd Edition, Pearson Education, 2008. 4. Erwin Kreyszig., &quot;Advanced Engineering Mathematics&quot;, 8th Edition, Wiley India, 2008.
UNIT I D.C. MACHINES 9 Constructional details ­ EMF equation ­ Methods of excitation ­ Self and separately excited generators ­ Characteristics of series, shunt and compound generators ­ Principle of operation of D.C. motor ­ Back EMF and torque equation ­ Characteristics of series, shunt and compound motors - Starting of D.C motors ­ Types of starters - Testing, brake test and swinburne's test ­ Speed control of D.C shunt motors. UNIT II TRANSFORMERS 9 Constructional details ­ Principle of operation ­ EMF equation ­ Transformation ratio ­ Transformer on no load ­ Parameters referred to HV/LV windings ­ Equivalent circuit ­ Transformer on load ­ Regulation ­ Testing ­ Load test ­ Open circuit and short circuit tests. UNIT III INDUCTIONMOTORS 9 Construction ­ Types ­ Principle of operation of three-phase induction motors ­ Equivalent circuit ­ Performance calculation ­ Starting and speed control ­ Single-phase induction motors (only qualitative treatment). UNIT IV SYNCHRONOUS AND SPECIAL MACHINES 9 Construction of synchronous machines ­ Types ­ Induced EMF ­ Voltage regulation ­ EMF and MMF methods ­ Brushless alternators ­ Reluctance motor ­ Hysteresis motor ­ Stepper motor. UNIT V TRANSMISSION AND DISTRIBUTION 9 Structure of electric power systems ­ Generation ­ Transmission and distribution systems ­ EHVAC and EHVDC transmission systems ­ Substation layout ­ Insulators ­ Cables. Total : 45 TEXT BOOKS 1. Kothari, D. P, and Nagrath, I. J., &quot;Basic Electrical Engineering&quot;, 2nd Edition, TMH Publishing Company Ltd, 2007. 2. Wadhwa, C.L., &quot;Electrical Power Systems&quot;, 4th Edition, New Age International, 2007. REFERENCES 1. Bhattacharya, S. K., &quot;Electrical Machines&quot;, 2nd Edition, TMH publishing company ltd, 2007. 2. Mehta, V. K, and Rohit Mehta., &quot;Principles of Power System&quot;, 2nd Edition, S. Chand and Company Ltd, 2006.
UNIT I FUNDAMENTALS OF ALGORITHMS 8 Algorithm ­ Analysis of Algorithm ­ Best Case and Worst Case Complexities ­ Analysis of Algorithm using Data Structures ­ Performance Analysis ­ Time Complexity ­ Space Complexity ­ Amortized Time Complexity ­ Asymptotic Notation UNIT II FUNDAMENTALS OF DATA STRUCTURES 9 Arrays ­ Structures ­ Stacks ­ Definition and examples ­ Representing Stacks ­ Queues and Lists ­ Queue and its Representation ­ Applications of Stack ­ Queue and Linked Lists. UNIT III TREES 10 Binary Trees ­ Operations on Binary Tree Representations ­ Node Representation ­ Internal and External Nodes ­ Implicit Array Representation ­ Binary Tree Traversal ­ Huffman Algorithm ­ Representing Lists as Binary Trees ­ Sorting and Searching Techniques ­ Tree Searching ­ Hashing UNIT IV GRAPHS AND THEIR APPLICATIONS 9 Graphs ­ An Application of Graphs ­ Representation ­ Transitive Closure ­ Warshall's Algorithm ­ Shortest path Algorithm ­ A Flow Problem ­ Dijikstra's Algorithm ­ Minimum Spanning Trees ­ Kruskal and Prim's Algorithm ­ An Application of Scheduling ­ Linked Representation of Graphs ­ Graph Traversals UNIT V STORAGE MANAGEMENT 9 General Lists ­ Operations ­ Linked List Representation ­ Using Lists ­ Freeing List Nodes ­ Automatic List Management : Reference Count Method ­ Garbage Collection ­ Collection and Compaction Total: 45 TEXT BOOKS 1. Cormen T. H.., Leiserson C. E, and Rivest R.L., &quot;Introduction to Algorithms&quot;, Prentice Hall of India, New Delhi, 2007. 2. M.A.Weiss, &quot;Data Structures and Algorithm Analysis in C&quot;, Second Edition, Pearson Education, 2005. REFERENCES 1. Ellis Horowitz, Sartaj Sahni and Sanguthevar Rajasekaran, &quot;Computer Algorthims/C++&quot;, Universities Press (India) Private Limited, Second Edition, 2007. 2. A. V. Aho, J. E. Hopcroft, and J. D. Ullman, &quot;Data Structures and Algorithms&quot;, First Edition, Pearson Education, 2003. 3. R. F. Gilberg and B. A. Forouzan, &quot;Data Structures&quot;, Second Edition, Thomson India Edition, 2005. 4. Robert L Kruse, Bruce P Leung and Clovin L Tondo, &quot;Data Structures and Program Design in C&quot;, Pearson Education, 2004. 5. Tanaenbaum A. S. Langram, Y. Augestein M.J, &quot;Data Structures using C&quot;, Pearson Education, 2004.
UNIT I BOOLEAN ALGEBRA AND MINIMIZATION 9 Basic theorems ­ Boolean functions ­ Canonical and Standard forms ­ Minimization techniques ­ K-map up to five variables ­ NAND and NOR implementation ­ ExclusiveOR function - Hardware Description Language (HDL). UNIT II DIGITAL LOGIC FAMILIES 9 Switching operation of PN junction diode ­ bipolar and MOS devices ­ Bipolar logic families ­ RTL ­ DTL ­ DCTL ­ HTL ­ TTL ­ ECL ­ MOS and CMOS ­ Tristate logic ­Interfacing of CMOS and TTL families. UNIT III COMBINATIONAL LOGIC DESIGN 9 Design using gates ­ BCD arithmetic circuits ­ Binary adder ­ Subtractor ­ Multiplier ­ Divider ­ Design using MSI devices ­ Multiplexer and Demultiplexer as logic elements ­ Encoder and decoder ­ Parity checker ­ Parity generator ­ Code converter ­ Magnitude comparator. UNIT IV SEQUENTIAL LOGIC DESIGN 9 Flip Flops and their conversions ­ Analysis and synthesis of synchronous sequential circuits ­ Excitation table ­ State table and state diagram ­ Design of synchronous counters ­ Analysis of asynchronous sequential circuits ­ Reduction of state and flow table ­ Race free state assignment ­ Design of Asynchronous counters ­ Timing diagram ­ Shift registers and their applications. UNIT V MEMORY DEVICES 9 Classification of memories ­ ROM organization ­ PROM ­ EPROM ­ EEPROM ­ EAPROM ­ RAM organization ­ Write operation ­ Read operation ­ Memory cycle ­ Timing wave forms ­ Memory decoding ­ Memory expansion ­ Static RAM CellBipolar RAM cell ­ MOSFET RAM cell ­ Dynamic RAM cell ­ Programmable Logic Devices ­ Programmable Logic Array (PLA) ­ Programmable Array Logic (PAL) ­Field Programmable Gate Arrays (FPGA). Total: 45 TEXT BOOKS 1. Morris Mano M., &quot;Digital Design&quot;, 3rd Edition, Pearson Education, 2007. 2. John M Yarbrough, &quot;Digital Logic Applications and Design&quot;, Thomson Learning, 2002. REFERENCES 1. John F.Wakerly, &quot;Digital Design&quot;, 4th Edition, Pearson/PHI, 2006 2. Charles H.Roth, &quot; Fundamentals of Logic Design&quot;, Thomson Learning, 2003. 3. Donald P.Leach and Albert Paul Malvino, &quot;Digital Principles and Applications&quot;, 6th Edition, TMH, 2003.
EC1202 ­ SIGNALS AND SYSTEMS L T P C 3 1 0 4 9 UNIT I CLASSIFICATION OF SIGNALS AND SYSTEMS Continuous Time signals (CT signals) ­ Discrete Time signals (DT signals) ­ Step ­ Ramp ­ Pulse ­ Impulse ­ Exponential ­ Classification of CT and DT signals ­ Periodic and Aperiodic ­ Random signals ­ CT systems and DT systems ­ Basic properties of systems ­ Linear time invariant systems and properties. UNIT II ANALYSIS OF CONTINUOUS TIME SIGNALS 9 Fourier series analysis ­ Spectrum of CT signals ­ Fourier transform and Laplace transform in signal analysis. UNIT III LINEAR TIME INVARIANT ­ CONTINUOUS TIME SYSTEMS 9 Differential equation ­ Block diagram representation ­ Impulse response ­ Convolution integral ­ Frequency response ­ Fourier and Laplace transforms in analysis ­ State variable equations and matrix representation of systems. UNIT IV ANALYSIS OF DISCRETE TIME SIGNALS 9 Sampling of CT signals and aliasing ­ DTFT and properties ­ Z-transform and properties of Z-transform. UNIT V LINEAR TIME INVARIANT - DISCRETE TIME SYSTEMS 9 Difference equations ­ Block diagram representation ­ Impulse response ­ Convolution sum ­ LTI systems analysis using DTFT and Z-transforms ­ State variable equations and matrix representation of systems. L : 45 T : 15 Total: 60 TEXT BOOKS 1. Ramakrishna Rao, P., &quot;Signals and Systems&quot;, 2nd Edition, TMH, 2008. 2. Allan V. Oppenheim, Wilsky, S, and Nawab, S. H., &quot;Signals and Systems&quot;, 8th Edition, Pearson Education, 2007. REFERENCES 1. Simon Haykins and Barry Van Veen., &quot;Signals and Systems&quot;, 16th Edition, John Wiley and Sons, 2004. 2. Robert A. Gabel and Richard A. Roberts., &quot;Signals and Linear Systems&quot;, 3rd Edition, John Wiley, 1987. 3. Rodger E. Ziemer, William H. Tranter and Ronald Fannin, D., &quot;Signals &amp; Systems&quot;, 4th Edition, Pearson Education, 2002. 4. Chen, C.T., &quot;Linear System Theory and Design&quot;, 14th Edition, Holt, Rinehart &amp; Winston, Inc, 1984.
TEXT BOOKS 1. Millman, J, and Halkias, C., &quot;Integrated Electronics&quot;, 4th Edition, TMH, 2007. 2. Robert L. Boylestad and Louis Nashelsky., &quot;Electronic Devices and Circuit Theory&quot;, 9th Edition, Pearson Education / PHI, 2007. REFERENCES 1. David A. Bell., &quot;Electronic Devices and Circuits&quot;, 4th Edition, PHI, 2007. 2. Floyd., &quot;Electronic Devices&quot;, 6th Edition, Pearson Education, 2002. 3. Anwar A. Khan and Kanchan K. Dey., &quot;A First Course on Electronics&quot;, PHI, 2006. 4. Singh, B. P, and Rekha Singh., &quot;Electronic Devices and Integrated Circuits&quot;, Pearson Education, 2006.
Design and implementation of 4-bit binary adder/ subtractor and BCD adder using IC 7483. Design and implementation of 2-bit magnitude comparator using logic gates and 8-bit magnitude comparator using IC 7485. Design and implementation of 16-bit odd/even parity checker and generator using IC74180. Design and implementation of Multiplexer and De-multiplexer using logic gates and study of IC74150 and IC 74154. Design and implementation of encoder and decoder using logic gates and study of IC7445 and IC74147. Construction and verification of 4-bit ripple counter and mod-10 / mod-12 ripple counters. Design and implementation of 3-bit synchronous up/down counter. Implementation of SISO, SIPO, PISO and PIPO shift registers using Flip-flops. Design of experiments 1, 6, 8 and 10 using Verilog Hardware Description Language (VHDL).
Class A power amplifier a) Observation of output waveform. b) Measurement of maximum power output. c) Determination of efficiency. d) Comparison with calculated values. Class B complementary symmetry power amplifier a) Observation of the output waveform with crossover distortion. b) Modification of the circuit to avoid crossover distortion. c) Measurement of maximum power output. d) Determination of efficiency. e) Comparison with calculated values. Power supply circuit ­ Half wave rectifier with simple capacitor filter. a) Measurement of DC voltage under load and ripple factor, comparison with calculated values. b) Plot the load regulation characteristics using zener diode. Power supply circuit ­ Full wave rectifier with simple capacitor filter. a) Measurement of DC voltage under load and ripple factor, comparison with calculated values. b) Measurement of load regulation characteristics, comparison with calculated values.
UNIT I RANDOM VARIABLES 9 Discrete and continuous random variables ­ Moments ­ Moment generating functions and their properties ­ Binomial ­ Poisson ­ Geometric ­ Uniform ­ Exponential ­ Gamma and normal distributions ­ Function of random variable. UNIT II TWO DIMENSIONAL RANDOM VARIABLES 9 Joint distributions ­ Marginal and conditional distributions ­ Covariance ­ Correlation and regression ­ Transformation of random variables ­ Central limit theorem (for IID random variables). UNIT III CLASSIFICATION OF RANDOM PROCESSES 9 Definition and examples ­ First order ­ Second order ­ Strictly stationary ­ Wide-sense stationary and ergodic process ­ Markov process ­ Binomial ­ Poisson and normal process ­ Sine wave process ­ Random telegraph process. UNIT IV CORRELATION AND SPECTRAL DENSITY 9 Auto correlation ­ Cross correlation ­ Properties ­ Power spectral density ­ Cross spectral density ­ Properties ­ Wiener-Khintchine relation ­ Relationship between cross power spectrum and cross correlation function . UNIT V LINEAR SYSTEMS WITH RANDOM INPUTS 9 Linear time invariant system ­ System transfer function ­ Linear systems with random inputs ­ Auto correlation and cross correlation functions of input and output ­ White noise. L : 45 T : 15 Total: 60 TEXT BOOKS 1. Oliver C. Ibe., &quot;Fundamentals of Applied Probability and Random Processes&quot;, Elsevier, First Indian Reprint, 2007. 2. Peebles Jr. P.Z., &quot;Probability Random Variables and Random Signal Principles&quot;, 4th Edition, TMH Publishers, 2002. REFERENCES 1. Miller, S. L and Childers, S. L., &quot;Probability and Random Processes with Applications to Signal Processing and Communications&quot;, Elsevier Inc., First Indian Reprint, 2007. 2. Stark, H and Woods, J. W., &quot;Probability and Random Processes with Applications to Signal Processing&quot;, 3rd Edition, Pearson Education, 2002. 3. Hwei Hsu., &quot;Schaum's Outline of Theory and Problems of Probability, Random Variables and Random Processes&quot;, 8th edition, TMH, 2004. 4. Leon Garcia, A., &quot;Probability and Random Processes for Electrical Engineering&quot;, 2nd Edition, Pearson Education, 2007. 5. Yates and Goodman, D. J., &quot;Probability and Stochastic Processes&quot;, 2nd Edition John Wiley and Sons, 2005.
UNIT 1 AMPLITUDE MODULATION SYSTEMS 10 Review of spectral characteristics of periodic and non-periodic signals ­ Generation and demodulation of AM, DSBSC, SSB and VSB signals ­ Comparison of amplitude modulation systems ­ Frequency translation ­ FDM ­ Non-linear distortion. UNIT II ANGLE MODULATION SYSTEMS 8 Phase and frequency modulation ­ Single tone ­ Narrow band and wideband FM ­ Transmission bandwidth ­ Generation and demodulation of FM signal. UNIT III NOISE THEORY 8 Review of probability ­ Random variables and random process ­ Gaussian process ­ Noise ­ Shot noise ­ Thermal noise and white noise ­ Narrow band noise ­ Noise temperature ­ Noise figure. UNIT IV PERFORMANCE OF CW MODULATION SYSTEMS 10 Superheterodyne radio receiver and its characteristic ­ SNR ­ Noise in DSBSC systems using coherent detection ­ Noise in AM system using envelope detection FM system ­ FM threshold effect ­ Pre-emphasis and de-emphasis in FM ­ Comparison of performances. UNIT V INFORMATION THEORY 9 Discrete messages and information content ­ Concept of amount of information ­ Average information ­ Entropy ­ Information rate ­ Source coding to increase average information per bit ­ Shannon-fano coding ­ Huffman coding ­ Lempel-Ziv (LZ) coding ­ Shannon's theorem ­ Channel capacity ­ Bandwidth ­ S/N trade-off ­ Mutual information and channel capacity ­ Rate distortion theory ­ Lossy source coding. L: 45 T: 15 Total: 60 TEXT BOOKS 1. Dennis Roddy and John Coolen., &quot;Electronic Communication&quot;, 4th Edition, PHI,1995. 2. Herbert Taub and Donald L Schilling., &quot;Principles of Communication Systems&quot;, 3rd Edition, TMH, 2008. REFERENCES 1. Simon Haykin., &quot;Communication Systems&quot;, 4th Edition, John Wiley and Sons, 2001. 2. Bruce Carlson., &quot;Communication Systems&quot;, 3rd Edition, TMH, 1996. 3. Lathi, B. P., &quot;Modern Digital and Analog Communication Systems&quot;, 3rd Edition, Oxford Press, 2007. 4. John G. Proakis, Masoud Salehi., &quot;Fundamentals of Communication Systems&quot;, 5th Edition, Pearson Education, 2006.
TEXTBOOKS 1. Hayt, W H. and Buck, J. A., &quot;Engineering Electromagnetics&quot;, 7th Edition, TMH, 2007. 2. Jordan, E. C, and Balmain, K. G., &quot;Electromagnetic Waves and Radiating Systems&quot;, 4th Edition, Pearson Education/PHI, 2006. REFERENCES 1. Mathew N. O. Sadiku, &quot;Elements of Engineering Electromagnetics&quot;, 4th Edition, Oxford University Press, 2007. 2. Narayana Rao, N., &quot;Elements of Engineering Electromagnetics&quot;, 6th Edition, Pearson Education, 2006. 3. Ramo, Whinnery and Van Duzer., &quot;Fields and Waves in Communication Electronics&quot;, 3rd Edition, John Wiley and Sons, 2003. 4. David K. Cheng., &quot;Field and Wave Electromagnetics&quot;, 2nd Edition, Pearson Education, 2004.
TEXT BOOKS 1. Sergio Franco., &quot;Design with Operational Amplifiers and Analog Integrated Circuits&quot;, 3rd Edition, TMH, 2007. 2. Roy Choudhry, D., and Shail Jain, &quot;Linear Integrated Circuits&quot;, 2nd Edition, New Age International Pvt. Ltd, 2000. REFERENCES 1. Sonde, B. S., &quot;System Design using Integrated Circuits&quot;, 2nd Edition, New Age Pub, 2001. 2. Gray and Meyer., &quot;Analysis and Design of Analog Integrated Circuits&quot;, 4th Edition, Wiley International, 2005. 3. Ramakant A. Gayakwad., &quot;OP-AMP and Linear ICs&quot;, 4th Edition, Prentice Hall / Pearson Education, 2001. 4. Michael Jacob, J., &quot;Applications and Design with Analog Integrated Circuits&quot;, 5th Edition, PHI, 1996.
State space representation of continuous time systems ­ State equations ­ Transfer function from state variable representation ­ Solutions of the state equations - Concepts of controllability and observability ­ State space representation for discrete time systems ­ Sampled data control systems ­ Sampling theorem ­ Sample and hold ­ Open loop and closed loop sampled data systems. Total : 45 TEXTBOOKS 1. Nagrath, J., and Gopal, M., &quot;Control System Engineering&quot;, 5th Edition, New Age International Publishers, 2007. 2. Gopal, M., &quot;Control System Principles and Design&quot;, 2nd Edition, TMH, 2002. REFERENCES 1. Benjamin C. Kuo., &quot;Automatic Control Systems&quot;, 7th Edition, PHI, 1995. 2. Schaum's Outline Series., &quot;Feedback and Control Systems&quot;, 2nd Edition, TMH, 2007. 3. John J. D'azzo and Constantine H. Houpis., &quot;Linear Control System Analysis and Design&quot;, 8th Edition, TMH, Inc., 1995. 4. Richard C. Dorf, and Robert H. Bishop., &quot;Modern Control Systems&quot;, 2nd Edition, Addison Wesley, 1999.
PCs, printers, bread boards and other consumables as required.
LIST OF EXPERIMENTS 1. Open circuit and load characteristics of separately excited and self excited D.C. generator. 2. Load test on DC shunt motor. 3. Swinburne's test and speed control of DC shunt motor. 4. Load test on single phase transformer and open circuit and short circuit test on single phase transformer 5. Regulation of three phase alternator by EMF and MMF methods. 6. Load test on three phase induction motor. 7. No load and blocked rotor tests on Three phase induction motor (Determination of equivalent circuit parameters) 8. Study of D.C. motor and induction motor starters. 9. Digital simulation of linear systems. 10. Stability analysis of linear system using MATLAB. 11. Study the effect of P, PI, PID controllers using MATLAB. 12. Design of lead and lag compensator. 13. Transfer function of separately excited D.C. generator. 14. Transfer function of armature and field controller DC motor.
Finite difference solution of second order ordinary differential equation ­ Finite difference solution of one dimensional heat equation by explicit and implicit methods ­ One dimensional wave equation and two dimensional Laplace and Poisson equations. L:45 T:15 Total: 60 TEXT BOOKS 1. Gerald, C. F. and Wheatley, P. O., &quot;Applied Numerical Analysis&quot;, 6th Edition, Pearson Education Asia, 2002. 2. Kandasamy, P., Thilagavathy, K. and Gunavathy, K., &quot;Numerical Methods&quot;, S.Chand Co. Ltd., 2003. REFERENCES 1. 2. Balagurusamy, E., &quot;Numerical Methods&quot;, TMH Pub. Co. Ltd, 1999. Burden, R.L. and Faires, T.D., &quot;Numerical Analysis&quot;, 7th Edition, Thomson Asia Pvt. Ltd., 2002.
UNIT I BASIC MEASUREMENT CONCEPTS 9 Measurement systems ­ Static and dynamic characteristics ­ Units and standards of measurements ­ Error analysis ­ Moving coil, moving iron meters ­ Multimeters ­ True RMS meters ­ Bridge measurements ­ Maxwell ­ Hay ­ Schering ­ Anderson and Wien Bridge. UNIT II BASIC ELECTRONIC MEASUREMENTS 9 Electronic multimeters ­ Cathode ray oscilloscopes ­ Block schematic ­ Applications ­ Special oscilloscopes ­ Q meters ­ Vector meters ­ RF voltage and power measurements. UNIT III SIGNAL GENERATORS AND ANALYZERS 9 Function generators ­ RF signal generators ­ Sweep generators ­ Frequency synthesizer ­ Wave analyzer ­ Harmonic distortion analyzer ­ Spectrum analyzer. UNIT IV DIGITAL INSTRUMENTS 9 Comparison of analog and digital techniques ­ Digital voltmeter ­ Multimeters ­ Frequency counters ­ Measurement of frequency and time interval ­ Extension of frequency range ­ Measurement errors. UNIT V DATA ACQUISITION SYSTEMS AND FIBER OPTIC MEASUREMENTS 9 Elements of a digital data acquisition system ­ Interfacing of transducers ­ Multiplexing ­ Computer controlled instrumentation ­ IEEE 488 bus ­ Fiber optic measurements for power and system loss ­ Optical time domains reflectometer. Total: 45 TEXT BOOK 1. Albert D. Helfrick, and William D. Cooper, &quot;Modern Electronic Instrumentation and Measurement Techniques&quot;, PHI, 2003. REFERENCES 1. Joseph J. Carr, &quot;Elements of Electronics Instrumentation and Measurement&quot;, Pearson education, 2003. 2. Alan. S. Morris, &quot;Principles of Measurements and Instrumentation&quot;, 2nd Edition, PHI, 2003. 3. Ernest O. Doebelin, &quot;Measurement Systems ­ Application and Design&quot;, TMH, 2004.
EC1301 ­ MICROPROCESSORS AND MICROCONTROLLERS L T P C 3 0 0 3 UNIT I 8085 MICROPROCESSOR 9 8085 architecture ­ Instruction set ­ Addressing modes ­ Timing diagrams ­ Assembly language programming ­ Counters ­ Time delays ­ Interrupts ­ Memory interfacing ­ Interfacing, I/O devices. UNIT II PERIPHERALS INTERFACING OF 8085 9 Interfacing serial I/O (8251) ­ Parallel I/O (8255) ­ Keyboard and display controller (8279) ­ ADC/DAC interfacing ­ Inter Integrated Circuits interfacing (I2C Standard) ­ Bus: RS232C ­ RS485 ­ GPIB UNIT III 8086 MICROPROCESSOR 9 8086 internal architecture ­ 8086 addressing modes ­ Instruction set ­ 8086 assembly language programming ­ Interrupts. UNIT IV 8051 MICROCONTROLLER 9 8051 micro controller hardware ­ I/O pins, ports and circuits ­ External memory ­ Counters and timers ­ Serial data I/O ­ Interrupts ­ Interfacing to external memory and 8255. UNIT V 8051 PROGRAMMING AND APPLICATIONS 9 8051 instruction set ­ Addressing modes ­ Assembly language programming ­ I/O port programming ­ Timer and counter programming ­ Serial communication ­ Interrupt programming ­ 8051 interfacing ­ LCD ­ ADC ­ Sensors ­ Stepper motors ­ Keyboard and DAC. Total: 45 TEXT BOOKS 1. Ramesh S. Gaonkar, &quot;Microprocessor Architecture, Programming and application with 8085&quot;, 4th Edition, PHI, 2000. 2. John Uffenbeck, &quot;The 80x86 Families, Design, Programming and Interfacing&quot;, 3rd Edition, Pearson Education, 2002. 3. Mohammed Ali Mazidi and Janice Gillispie Mazidi, &quot;The 8051 Microcontroller and Embedded Systems&quot;, Pearson Education Asia, 2003. REFERENCES 1. Ray A.K. and Burchandi K.M., &quot;Intel Microprocessors Architecture Programming and Interfacing&quot;, TMH, 2000 2. Kenneth J. Ayala, &quot;The 8051 Microcontroller Architecture Programming and Application&quot;, 2nd Edition, Penram International Publishers (India), 1996. 3. Rafiquzhman M., &quot;Microprocessors Theory and Applications: Intel and Motorola&quot;, PHI Pvt. Ltd., 2003.
UNIT I FAST FOURIER TRANSFORM 9 Introduction to DFT ­ Efficient computation of DFT properties of DFT ­ FFT algorithms ­ Radix­2 FFT algorithms ­ Decimation in Time(DIT) ­ Decimation in Frequency(DIF) algorithms ­Use of FFT algorithms in linear filtering and correlation. UNIT II DIGITAL FILTER DESIGN 9 Amplitude and phase responses of FIR filters ­ Linear phase filters ­ Windowing techniques for design of linear phase FIR filters ­ Rectangular, Hamming, Kaiser Window ­ Frequency sampling techniques ­ IIR filters ­ Magnitude response ­ Phase response ­ Group delay ­ Design of low pass Butterworth filters (low pass) ­ Bilinear transformation ­ Pre-warping ­ Impulse invariant transformation. UNIT III FINITE WORD LENGTH EFFECTS 9 Quantization noise ­ Derivation for quantization noise power ­ Fixed point and binary floating point number representation ­ Comparison ­ Over flow error ­ Truncation error ­ Co-efficient quantization error ­ Limit cycle oscillation ­ Signal scaling ­ Analytical model of sample and hold operations. UNIT IV POWER SPECTRUM ESTIMATION 9 Computation of energy density spectrum ­ Auto correlation and power spectrum of random signals ­ Periodogram ­ Use of DFT in power spectrum estimation ­ Non parametric methods for power spectral estimation ­ Bartlett and Welch methods ­ Blackman and Tukey method. UNIT V DIGITAL SIGNAL PROCESSORS 9 Introduction to DSP architecture ­ Harvard architecture ­ Dedicated MAC unit ­ Multiple buses, advanced addressing modes ­ Pipelining ­ Overview of instruction set of TMS320C5X and C54X. Total: 45 TEXT BOOKS 1. John G. Proakis, Dimtris G. Manolakis, &quot;Digital Signal Processing Principles, Algorithms and Application&quot;, 3rd Edition, PHI, 2000. 2. Venkataramani B. and Bhaskar M., &quot;Digital Signal Processor Architecture, Programming and Application&quot;, TMH, 2002. REFERENCES 1. Alan V. Oppenheim, Ronald W. Schafer, John R. Back, &quot;Discrete Time Signal Processing&quot;, 2nd Edition , PHI, 2000. 2. Johny R. Johnson, &quot;Introduction to Digital Signal Processing&quot;, PHI, 1984. 3. Mitra S. K, &quot;Digital Signal Processing ­ A Computer based approach&quot;, TMH, 1998.
TEXT BOOKS 1. Ryder J. D., &quot;Networks, Lines and Fields&quot;, PHI, 2003. 2. Jordan E. C. and Balmain K. G., &quot;Electro Magnetic Waves and Radiating System&quot;, PHI, 2003. REFERENCES 1. Ramo, Whineery and Van Duzer, &quot;Fields and Waves in Communication Electronics&quot;, John Wiley, 2003. 2. David M. Pozar, &quot;Microwave Engineering&quot;, 2nd Edition, John Wiley, 1997. 3. David K. Cheng, &quot;Field and Waves in Electromagnetism&quot;, Pearson Education, 1989.
HS1201 ­ ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING L T P C 3 0 0 3 UNIT I IMPORTANCE OF ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES 9 Definition ­ Scope and importance ­ Need for public awareness ­ Forest resources ­ Water resources ­ Mineral resources ­ Land resources ­ Energy resources ­ Food resources ­ Equitable use of resources for sustainable lifestyles. UNIT II ECOSYSTEMS AND BIO DIVERSITY 9 Concept of ecosystem ­ Structure and function of an ecosystem ­ Energy flow in the ecosystem ­ Food chains ­ Food webs ­ Ecological pyramids ­ Definition of biodiversity ­ Bio-geographical classification in India ­ Value of bio-diversity ­ Biodiversity at Global, National and local levels ­ India as a mega diversity nation ­ Hot spots of bio-diversity ­ Threats to bio-diversity ­ Conservation of bio-diversity UNIT III ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION 9 Definition ­ Causes and effects of environmental pollution ­ Air pollution ­ Water pollution ­ Soil pollution ­ Marine pollution ­ Noise pollution ­ Thermal pollution ­ Nuclear hazards ­ Solid waste management ­ Societal role in pollution prevention ­ Environmental disasters and management. UNIT IV SOCIAL ISSUES AND THE ENVIRONMENT 9 Unsustainable to sustainable development ­ Concept of conservation ­ Water and energy conservation ­ Rain water harvesting ­ Climate change ­ Global warning ­ Acid rain ­ Ozone layer depletion ­ Nuclear accidents and holocaust ­ Environmental protection act ­ Issues involved in enforcement of environmental legislation ­ Public awareness. UNIT V HUMAN POPULATION AND THE ENVIRONMENT 9 Population growth ­ Population explosion ­ Family welfare programme ­ Environment and Human health ­ Human rights ­ Value education ­ HIV / AIDS ­ Women and child welfare ­ Role of IT in environment and human health Total: 45 TEXT BOOKS 1. Gilbert M. Masters, &quot;Introduction to Environmental Engineering and Science&quot;, 2nd Edition, Pearson Education, 2004. 2. Miller T.G. Jr., &quot;Environmental Science Working With the Earth&quot;, Thomson Learning, 2004. 3. Trivedi R. K. and Goel P.K., &quot;Introduction to Air Pollution&quot;, Techno-Science Publications, 1998. REFERENCES 1. Bharucha Erach, &quot;The Biodiversity of India&quot;, Mapin Publishing, Ahmedabad, 2003. 2. Trivedi R.K., &quot;Handbook of Environmental Laws, Rules, Guidelines, Compliances and Standards&quot;, Vol. I and II Environ Media, 2007. 3. Cunningham W. P. Copper, Gorhani T.H., &quot;Environmental Encyclopaedia&quot;, Jaico Pub, 2001.
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CS1302 ­ COMPUTER NETWORKS L T P C 3 0 0 3 UNIT I DATA COMMUNICATION 8 Components and categories ­ Types of connections ­ Topologies ­ Protocols and standards ­ ISO / OSI model ­ Transmission media ­ Line coding ­ Modems ­ RS232 interfacing sequences. UNIT II DATA LINK LAYER 12 Error ­ Detection and correction ­ Parity ­ LRC ­ CRC ­ Hamming code ­ Flow control and Error control: Stop and wait ­ Go Back N ARQ ­ Selective repeat ARQ ­ Sliding window techniques ­ HDLC. LAN: Ethernet IEEE 802.3 ­ IEEE 802.4 and IEEE 802.5 ­ IEEE 802.11 ­ FDDI ­ SONET ­ Bridges. UNIT III NETWORK LAYER 10 Routers ­ Internet working ­ Packet switching and datagram approach ­ IP addressing methods ­ Sub netting ­ Routing ­ Distance vector routing ­ Link state routing. UNIT IV TRANSPORT LAYER 8 Duties of transport layer ­ Multiplexing ­ Demultiplexing ­ Sockets ­ User Datagram Protocol (UDP) ­ Transmission Control Protocol (TCP) ­ Congestion control ­ Quality of Services (QOS) ­ Integrated services. UNIT V APPLICATION LAYER 7 Domain Name Space (DNS) ­ SMTP ­ FTP ­ HTTP ­ WWW ­ Security ­ Cryptography. Total:45 TEXT BOOK 1. Behrouz A. Foruzan, &quot;Data communication and Networking&quot;, TMH, 2004. REFERENCES 1. Larry L. Peterson and Peter S. Davie, &quot;COMPUTER NETWORKS&quot;, 2nd Edition, Harcourt Asia Pvt. Ltd., 1996. 2. Andrew S. Tannenbaum, &quot;Computer Networks&quot;, 4th Edition, PHI, 2003. 3. William Stallings, &quot;Data and Computer Communication&quot;, 6th Edition, Pearson Education, 2000. 4. James F. Kurouse and Rouse W, &quot;Computer Networking: A Topdown Approach Featuring&quot;, Pearson Education, 2003.
TEXTBOOK 1. John D. Kraus and Ronalatory Marhefka, &quot;Antennas&quot;, TMH Book Company, 2002. REFERENCES 1. Jordan E. C. and Balmain, &quot;Electro Magnetic Waves and Radiating Systems&quot;, PHI, 1968, Reprint 2003 2. Collins R. E., &quot;Antennas and Radio Propagation&quot;, TMH, 1987. 3. Balanis, &quot;Antenna Theory&quot;, 2nd Edition, John Wiley &amp; Sons, 2003.
TEXT BOOK 1. Carl Hamacher, Zvonko Vranesic and Safwat Zaky., &quot;Computer Organization&quot; 5th Edition, TMH, 2002. REFERENCES 1. William Stallings, &quot;Computer Organization &amp; Architecture ­Designing for Performance&quot;, 6th Edition, Pearson Education, 2003 reprint. 2. David A. Patterson and John L. Hennessy, &quot;Computer Organization &amp; Design, the hardware / software interface&quot;, 2nd Edition, Morgan Kaufmann, 2002 reprint. 3. John P. Hayes, &quot;Computer Architecture &amp; Organization&quot;, 3rd Edition, TMH, 1998.
EC1354 ­ VLSI DESIGN L T P C 3 0 0 3 UNIT I MOS TRANSISTOR THEORY AND PROCESS TECHNOLOGY 9 NMOS and PMOS transistors ­ Threshold voltage ­ Body effect ­ Design equations­ Second order effects ­ MOS models and small signal AC characteristics ­ Basic CMOS technology UNIT II INVERTERS AND LOGIC GATES 9 NMOS and CMOS inverters ­ Stick diagram ­ Inverter ratio ­ DC and transient characteristics ­ Switching times ­ Super buffers ­ Driving large capacitance loads ­ CMOS logic structures ­ Transmission gates ­ Static CMOS design ­ Dynamic CMOS design UNIT III CIRCUIT CHARACTERISATION AND PERFORMANCE ESTIMATION 9 Resistance estimation ­ Capacitance estimation ­ Inductance ­ Switching characteristics ­ Transistor sizing ­ Power dissipation and design margining ­ Charge sharing ­ Scaling UNIT IV VLSI SYSTEM COMPONENTS CIRCUITS AND SYSTEM LEVEL PHYSICAL DESIGN 9 Multiplexers ­ Decoders ­ Comparators ­ Priority encoders ­ Shift registers ­ Arithmetic circuits ­ Ripple carry adders ­ Carry look ahead adders ­ High-speed adders ­ Multipliers ­ Physical design ­ Delay modeling ­ Cross talk ­ Floor planning ­ Power distribution ­ Clock distribution ­ Basics of CMOS testing UNITV VERILOG HARDWARE DESCRIPTION LANGUAGE 9 Overview of digital design with Verilog HDL ­ Hierarchical modeling concepts­ Modules and port definitions ­ Gate level modeling­ Data flow modeling ­ Behavioral modeling ­ Task &amp; functions ­ Test bench Total: 45 TEXT BOOKS 1. Neil H. E. Weste and Kamran Eshraghian, &quot;Principles of CMOS VLSI Design&quot;, 2nd edition, Pearson Education Asia, 2000. 2. John P. Uyemura, &quot;Introduction to VLSI Circuits and Systems&quot;, John Wiley and Sons, Inc., 2002. 3. Samir Palnitkar, &quot;Verilog HDL&quot;, 2nd Edition,Pearson Education, 2004. REFERENCES 1. Eugene D. Fabricius, &quot;Introduction to VLSI Design&quot;, TMH International Editions, 1990. 2. Bhasker J., &quot;A Verilog HDL Primer&quot;, 2nd Edition, B. S. Publications, 2001. 3. Pucknell, &quot;Basic VLSI Design&quot;, Prentice Hall of India Publication, 1995. 4. Wayne Wolf, &quot;Modern VLSI Design System on chip&quot;, Pearson Education, 2002.
LIST OF EXPERIMENTS 1. Study of simulation using tools. 2. Study of synthesis tools. 3. Place and root and back annotation for FPGAs. 4. Study of development tool for FPGA for schematic entry and Verilog. 5. Design of traffic light controller using Verilog and above tools. 6. Design and simulation of pipelined serial and parallel adder to add/subract 8 number of size, 12-bits each in 2's complement. 7. Design and simulation of back annotated Verilog files for multiplying two signed, 8-bit numbers in 2's complement. Design must be pipelined and completely RTL compliant. 8. Study of FPGA board and testing on board LED's and switches using Verilog codes. 9. Testing the traffic controller design developed In SI. NO.5 on the FPGA board. 10. Design a realtime clock (2 digits, 7 segments LED displays each for HRS, MTS, and SECS) and demonstrate its working on the FPGA board (an expansion card is required for the displays).
EC1401 ­ OPTICAL COMMUNICATION AND NETWORKS L T P C 3 0 0 3 UNIT I OPTICAL NETWORKING COMPONENTS 9 First and second generation optical networks ­ Components ­ Couplers ­ Isolators ­ circulators ­ Multiplexers ­ Filters ­ Amplifiers ­ Switches and wavelength converters UNIT II SONET AND SDH NETWORKS 9 Integration of TDM signals ­ Layers ­ Framing ­ Transport overhead ­ Alarms ­ multiplexing ­ Network elements ­ Topologies ­ Protection architectures ­ Ring architectures ­ Network management UNIT III BROADCAST AND SELECT NETWORKS 9 Topologies ­ Single-hop ­ Multi-hop ­ and Shufflenet multi-hop network ­ Media ­ Access control protocols ­ Test beds. UNIT IV WAVELENGTH ROUTING NETWORKS 9 Node design ­ Issues in network design and operation ­ Optical layer cost tradeoffs ­ Routing and wavelength assignment ­ Wavelength routing test beds UNIT V HIGH CAPACITY NETWORKS 9 SDM ­ TDM and WDM approaches ­ Application areas ­ Optical TDM networks ­ Multiplexing and demultiplexing ­ Synchronization ­ Broadcast networks ­ Switch based networks ­ OTDM test beds Total: 45 TEXT BOOKS 1. Rajiv, Ramaswami and Kumar Sivarajan, &quot;Optical Networks: A practical perspective&quot;, 2nd Edition, Morgan Kaufmann, 2001. 2. Keiser G., &quot;Optical fiber communication systems&quot;, McGraw-Hill, 2000. REFERENCES 1. Vivek Alwayn, &quot;Optical Network Design and Implementation&quot;, Pearson Education, 2004. 2. Hussein T. Mouftab and Pin-Han Ho, &quot;Optical Networks: Architecture and Survivability&quot;, Kluwer Academic Publishers, 2002.
TEXT BOOK 1. Annapurna Das, Sisir K. Das, &quot;Microwave Engineering&quot;, TMH Co., Ltd., 1999. Reprint 2001. REFERENCES 1. Collin R.E., &quot;Foundation of Microwave Engineering&quot;, 2nd Edition, TMH, 1992. 2. Samuel Y. Liao, &quot;Microwave devices and Circuits&quot;, PHI Pvt Ltd., 1995. 3. Reich J.H. et al, &quot;Microwave&quot;, East West Press, 1978.
1 3 3 3 1 2 2 2 8 Nos 1 2 1 1 1 Each 1 No.
MG1301 ­ TOTAL QUALITY MANAGEMENT L T P C 3 0 0 3 UNIT I INTRODUCTION 9 Definition of quality ­ Dimensions of quality ­ Quality planning ­ Quality costs ­ Analysis techniques for quality costs ­ Basic concepts of total quality management ­ Historical review ­ Principles of TQM ­ Leadership ­ Concepts ­ Role of senior Management ­ Quality council ­ Quality statements ­ Strategic planning ­ Deming philosophy ­ Barriers to TQM implementation. UNIT II TQM PRINCIPLES 9 Customer satisfaction ­ Customer perception of quality ­ Customer complaints ­ Service quality ­ Customer retention ­ Employee involvement ­ Motivation ­ Empowerment ­ Teams ­ Recognition and reward ­ Performance appraisal ­ Benefits ­ Continuous process improvement ­ Juran trilogy ­ PDSA cycle ­ 5S-kaizen ­ Supplier partnership ­ Partnering ­ Sourcing ­ Supplier selection ­ Supplier rating ­ Relationship development ­ Performance measures ­ Basic concepts ­ Strategy ­ Performance measure. UNIT III STATISTICAL PROCESS CONTROL (SPC) 9 The seven tools of quality ­ Statistical fundamentals ­ Measures of central tendency and dispersion ­ Population and sample ­ Normal curve ­ Control charts for variables and attributes ­ Process capability ­ Concept of six sigma ­ New seven management tools. UNIT IV TQM TOOLS 9 Benchmarking ­ Reasons to benchmark ­ Benchmarking process ­ Quality Function Deployment (QFD) ­ House of quality ­ QFD process ­ Benefits ­ Taguchi quality loss function ­ Total Productive Maintenance (TPM) ­ Concept ­ Improvement needs ­ FMEA ­ Stages of FMEA. UNIT V QUALITY SYSTEMS 9 Need for ISO 9000 and other quality systems ­ ISO 9000:2000 quality systems ­ Elements, implementation of quality system ­ Documentation ­ Quality auditing ­ TS 16949 ­ ISO 14000 ­ Concept ­ Requirements and benefits. Total: 45 TEXT BOOK 1. Dale H. Besterfiled, et al., &quot;Total Quality Management&quot;, Pearson Education, Inc., ISBN 81­297­0260­6, 2003 (Indian reprint 2004). REFERENCES 1. James R. Evans and William M. Lidsay., &quot;The Management and Control of Quality&quot;, 5th Edition, South­Western (Thomson Learning), 2002 (ISBN 0­324­ 06680­5). 2. Feigenbaum A.V., &quot;Total Quality Management&quot;, TMH, 1991. 3. Oakland J.S., &quot;Total Quality Management&quot; Butterworth-Hcinemann Ltd., 1989. 4. Narayana V. and Sreenivasan N.S., &quot;Quality Management - Concepts and Tasks&quot;, New Age International, 1996. 5. Zeiri, &quot;Total Quality Management for Engineers&quot;, Wood Head Publishers, 1991.
UNIT I NATURE OF SPEECH SIGNAL 9 Speech production mechanism ­ Classification of speech ­ Sounds ­ Nature of speech signal ­ Models of speech production Speech Signal Processing: Purpose of speech processing ­ Digital models for speech signal ­ Digital processing of speech signals ­ Significance ­ Short time analysis. UNIT II TIME DOMAIN METHODS FOR SPEECH PROCESSING 9 Time domain parameters of speech ­ Methods for extracting the parameters ­ Zero crossings ­ Auto correlation function ­ Pitch estimation. UNIT III FREQUENCY DOMAIN METHODS FOR SPEECH PROCESSING 9 Short time fourier analysis ­ Filter bank analysis ­ Spectrographic analysis ­ Format extraction ­ Pitch extraction ­ Analysis ­ Synthesis systems. UNIT IV LINEAR PREDICTIVE CODING OF SPEECH 9 Formulation of linear prediction problem in time domain ­ Solution of normal equations ­ Interpretation of linear prediction in auto correlation and spectral domains. UNIT V HOMOMORPHIC SPEECH ANALYSIS 9 Central analysis of speech ­ Format and pitch estimation ­ Applications of speech processing ­ Speech recognition ­ Speech synthesis and speaker verification. Total: 45 TEXTBOOK 1. Rabiner L.R. and Schafer R.E, &quot;Digital Processing of Speech Signals&quot;, Prentice Hall, 1978. REFERENCES 1. Flanagan J.L, &quot;Speech Analysis Synthesis and Perception&quot;, 2nd Edition, Springer Vertag, 1972. 2. Witten I.H., &quot;Principles of Computer Speech&quot;, Academic Press, 1983.
UNIT I ADVANCED MICROPROCESSOR ARCHITECTURE 9 Internal microprocessor architecture ­ Real mode memory addressing ­ Protected mode memory addressing ­ Memory paging ­ Data addressing modes ­ Program memory addressing modes ­ Stack memory addressing modes ­ Data movement instructions ­ Program control instructions ­ Arithmetic and logic instructions. UNIT II MODULAR PROGRAMMING AND ITS CONCEPTS 9 Modular programming ­ Using keyboard and video display ­ Data conversions ­ Disk files ­ Interrupt hooks ­ Using assembly languages with C/ C++ UNIT III PENTIUM PROCESSORS 9 Introduction to pentium microprocessor ­ Special pentium registers ­ Pentium memory management ­ New pentium instructions ­ Pentium processor ­ Special pentium pro features ­ Pentium IV processor UNIT IV 16­ BIT MICRO CONTROLLER 9 8096/8097 architecture ­ CPU registers ­ RALU ­ Internal program and data memory timers ­ High speed input and output ­ Serial interface ­ I/O ports ­ Interrupts ­ A/D converter ­ Watch dog timer ­ Power down feature ­ Instruction set ­ External memory interfacing ­ External I/O interfacing. UNIT V RISC PROCESSORS AND ARM 9 The RISC revolution ­ Characteristics of RISC architecture ­ The berkeley RISC ­ Register windows ­ Windows and parameter passing ­ Window overflow ­ RISC architecture and pipelining ­ Pipeline bubbles ­ Accessing external memory in RISC systems ­ Reducing the branch penalties ­ Branch prediction ­ ARM processors ­ ARM registers ­ ARM instructions ­ ARM built-in shift mechanism ­ ARM branch instructions ­ Sequence control ­ Data movement and memory reference instructions. Total: 45 TEXT BOOKS 1. Barry B. Brey, &quot;The Intel Microprocessors 8086/8088, 80, 86, 80286, 80386 80486, Pentium, Pentium Pro Processor, Pentium II, Pentium III, Pentium 4, Architecture, Programming and Interfacing&quot;, PHI Private Limited, 2003. 2. John Peatman, &quot;Design with Microcontroller&quot;, TMH Publishing Co Ltd, 2003. 3. Alan Clements, &quot;The Principles of Computer Hardware&quot;, 3rd Edition, Oxford University Press, 2003. REFERENCES 1. Rajkamal, &quot;The Concepts and Feature of Micro Controllers 68HC11, 8051 and 8096&quot;, S Chand Publishers, 2000.
PARAMETRIC METHODS FOR POWER SPECTRUM ESTIMATION 9 Relationship between auto correlation and model parameters ­ Yule ­ Walker method for the AR model parameters ­ Burg method for the AR model parameters ­ Unconstrained least ­ Squares method for the AR model parameters ­ Sequential estimation methods for AR model parameters ­ Selection of AR model order. UNIT II ADAPTIVE SIGNAL PROCESSING 9 FIR adaptive filters ­ Steepest descent adaptive filter ­ LMS algorithm ­ Convergence of LMS algorithms ­ Application: Noise cancellation ­ Channel equalization ­ Adaptive recursive filters ­ Recursive least squares. UNIT III MULTIRATE SIGNAL PROCESSING 9 Decimation by a factor D ­ Interpolation by a factor I ­ Filter design and implementation for sampling rate conversion: Direct form FIR filter structures ­ Polyphase filter structure. UNIT IV SPEECH SIGNAL PROCESSING 9 Digital models for speech signal ­ Mechanism of speech production ­ Model for vocal tract, radiation and excitation ­ Complete model ­ Time domain processing of speech signal ­ Pitch period estimation ­ Using autocorrelation function ­ Linear predictive coding: Basic principles ­ Autocorrelation method ­ Durbin recursive solution. UNIT V WAVELET TRANSFORMS 9 Fourier transform ­ Power and limitations ­ Short time fourier transform ­ The gabor transform ­ Discrete time fourier transform and filter banks ­ Continuous wavelet transform ­ Wavelet transform ideal case ­ Perfect reconstruction filter banks and wavelets ­ Recursive multi-resolution decomposition ­ Haar wavelet ­ Daubechies wavelet. Total: 45 TEXTBOOKS 1. Monson H. Hayes, &quot;Statistical Digital Signal Processing and Modeling&quot;, Wiley, 2002. 2. John G. Proakis and Dimitris G. Manobakis, &quot;Digital Signal Processing Principles, Algorithms and Applications&quot;, 3rd Edition, PHI, 2000. REFERENCES 1. Rabiner L.R. and Schaber R.W., &quot;Digital Processing of Speech Signals&quot;, Pearson Education, 1979. 2. Roberto Crist, &quot;Modern Digital Signal Processing&quot;, Thomson Brooks/Cole, 2004. 3. Raghuveer M. Rao, and Ajit S. Bopardikar, &quot;Wavelet Transforms, Introduction to Theory and Applications&quot;, Pearson Education, 2000.
UNIT I POWER ELECTRONICS DEVICES 9 Characteristics of power devices ­ Characteristics of SCR ­ Diac ­ Triac ­ SCS ­ GTO ­ PUT ­ Power transistors ­ Power FET 's ­ LASCR ­ Two transistor model of SCR ­ Protection of thyristors against over voltage ­ Over current ­ dv/dt and di/dt. UNIT II TRIGGERING TECHNIQUES 9 Turn on circuits for SCR ­ Triggering with single pulse and train of pulses ­ Synchronizing with supply ­ Triggering with microprocessor ­ Forced commutation ­ Different techniques ­ Series and parallel operations of SCR's. UNIT III CONTROLLED RECTIFIERS 9 Converters ­ Single phase ­ Three phase ­ Half controlled and fully controlled rectifiers ­ Waveforms of load voltage and line current under constant load current ­ Effect of transformer leakage inductance ­ Dual converter. UNIT IV INVERTERS 9 Voltage and current source inverters ­ Resonant ­ Series inverter ­ PWM inverter ­ AC and DC choppers ­ DC to DC converters ­ Buck, boost and buck-Boost. UNIT V INDUSTRIAL APPLICATIONS 9 DC motor drives ­ Induction and synchronous motor drives ­ Switched reluctance and brushless motor drives ­ Battery charger ­ SMPS ­ UPS ­ Induction and dielectric heating. Total: 45 TEXT BOOKS 1. Muhamed H. Rashid, &quot;Power Electronics Circuits, Devices and Applications&quot;, 3rd Edition, PHI, 2004. 2. Singh and Kanchandani, &quot;Power Electronics&quot;, TMH, 1998. REFERENCES 1. Sen P.C., &quot;Power Electronics&quot;, TMH, 1987. 2. Dubey, &quot;Thyristorised Power Controllers&quot;, Wiley Eastern 1986. 3. Vithayathil, &quot;Power Electronics ­ Principles and Applications&quot;, TMH, 1995. 4. Lander, &quot;Power Electronics&quot;, 3rd Edition, TMH, 1994.
UNIT I HUMAN VALUES 10 Morals, values and ethics ­ Integrity ­ Work ethic ­ Service learning ­ Civic virtue ­ Respect for others ­ Living peacefully ­ Caring ­ Sharing ­ Honesty ­ Courage ­ Valuing time ­ Co-operation ­ Commitment ­ Empathy ­ Self -confidence ­ Character ­ Spirituality UNIT II ENGINEERING ETHICS 9 Senses of &quot;Engineering Ethics&quot; ­ Variety of moral issued ­ Types of inquiry ­ Moral dilemmas ­ Moral autonomy ­ Kohlberg's theory ­ Gilligan's theory ­ Consensus and controversy ­ Models of professional roles ­ Theories about right action ­ Self-interest ­ Customs and religion ­ Uses of ethical theories. UNIT III ENGINEERING AS SOCIAL EXPERIMENTATION 9 Engineering as experimentation ­ Engineers as responsible experimenters ­ Codes of ethics ­ A balanced outlook on law ­ The challenger case study UNIT IV SAFETY, RESPONSIBILITIES AND RIGHTS 9 Safety and risk ­ Assessment of safety and risk ­ Risk benefit analysis and risk ­ The three mile island and chernobyl case studies ­ Collegiality and loyalty ­ Respect for authority ­ Collective bargaining ­ Confidentiality ­ Conflicts of interest ­ Occupational crime ­ Professional rights ­ Employee rights ­ Intellectual Property Rights (IPR) ­ Discrimination. UNIT V GLOBAL ISSUES 8 Multinational corporations ­ Environmental ethics ­ Computer ethics ­ Weapons development ­ Engineers as managers ­ Consulting engineers ­ Engineers as expert witnesses and advisors ­ Moral leadership­ Sample code of ethics Like ASME, ASCE, IEEE, Institution of Engineers(India), Indian Institute of Materials Management, Institution Of Electronics and Telecommunication Engineers(IETE),India, etc. Total: 45 TEXT BOOKS 1. Mike Martin and Roland Schinzinger, &quot;Ethics in Engineering&quot;, TMH, 1996. 2. Govindarajan M, Natarajan S and Senthil Kumar V. S., &quot;Engineering Ethics&quot;, Prentice Hall of India, 2004. REFERENCES 1. Charles D. Fleddermann, &quot;Engineering Ethics&quot;, Pearson Education/ Prentice Hall, 2004. 2. Charles E. Harris, Michael S. Protchard and Michael J. Rabins, &quot;Engineering Ethics ­ Concepts and Cases&quot;, Wadsworth Thompson Learning, 2000. 3. John R. Boatright, &quot;Ethics and the Conduct of Business&quot;, Pearson Education, 2003. 4. Edmund G. Seebauer and Robert L. Barry, &quot;Fundamentals of Ethics for Scientists and Engineers&quot;, Oxford University Press, 2001.
TEXT BOOK 1. Abraham Silberschatz, Peter Baer Galvin and Greg Gagne, &quot;Operating System Concepts, Windows XP Update&quot;, 6th Edition, John Wiley and Sons (ASIA) Pvt. LTD, 2003. REFERENCES 1. Harvey M. Deitel, &quot;Operating Systems&quot;, 2nd Edition, Pearson Education Pvt. Ltd, 2002. 2. Andrew S. Tanenbaum, &quot;Modern Operating Systems&quot;, PHI Pvt. Ltd, 2003. 3. William Stallings, &quot;Operating System&quot;, 4th Edition, PHI, 2003.
Total: 45 REFERENCES 1. Dauglas E. Comer, &quot;Internetworking with TCP/IP&quot;, Vol. I, 3rd Edition, PHI, 1999. 2. Eric Ladd and Jim O'Donnell, &quot;Using HTML 4, XML and Java 1.2&quot;, Que Platinum Edition, PHI, 1999. 3. William Stallings, &quot;High Speed Networks&quot;, PHI, 1998.
UNIT I CPU AND MEMORY 9 CPU essentials ­ Processor modes ­ Modern CPU concepts ­ Architectural performance features ­ The Intel's CPU ­ CPU over clocking ­ Over clocking requirements ­ Over clocking the system ­ Over clocking the Intel processors ­ Essential memory concepts ­ Memory organizations ­ Memory packages ­ Modules ­ Logical memory organizations ­ Memory considerations ­ Memory types ­ Memory techniques ­ Selecting and installing memory. UNIT II MOTHERBOARDS 9 Active motherboards ­ Sockets and slots ­ Intel D850GB ­ Pentium4 mother board ­ Expansion slots ­ Form factor ­ Upgrading a mother board ­ Chipsets ­ North bridge ­ South bridge ­ CMOS ­ CMOS optimization tactics ­ Configuring the standard CMOS setup ­ Motherboard BIOS ­ POST ­ BIOS features ­ BIOS and boot sequences ­ BIOS shortcomings and compatibility issues ­ Power supplies and power management ­ Concepts of switching regulation ­ Potential power problems ­ Power management. UNIT III STORAGE DEVICES 9 The floppy drive ­ Magnetic storage ­ Magnetic recording principles ­ Data and disk organization ­ Floppy drive ­ Hard drive ­ Data organization and hard drive ­ Sector layout ­ IDE drive standard and features ­ Hard drive electronics ­ CD-ROM drive ­ Construction ­ CD-ROM electronics ­ DVD-ROM ­ DVD media ­ DVD drive and decoder. UNIT IV I/O PERIPHERALS 9 Parallel port ­ Signals and timing diagram ­ IEEE1284 modes ­ Asynchronous communication ­ Serial port signals ­ Video adapters ­ Graphic accelerators ­ 3D graphics accelerator issues ­ Direct ­ Mice ­ Modems ­ Keyboards ­ Sound boards ­ Audio bench marks. UNIT V BUS ARCHITECTURE 9 Buses ­ Industry Standard Architecture (ISA) ­ Peripheral Component Interconnect (PCI) ­ Accelerated Graphics Port (AGP) ­ Plug-and-play devices ­ SCSI concepts ­ USB architecture. Total: 45 TEXT BOOK 1. Stephen J. Bigelow, &quot;Trouble Shooting, Maintaining and Repairing PCs&quot;, TMH, 2001. REFERENCES 1. Craig Zacker and John Rourke, &quot;The Complete Reference: PC Hardware&quot;, TMH, 2001. 2. Mike Meyers, &quot;Introduction to PC Hardware and Trouble Shooting&quot;, TMH, 2003. 3. Govindarajulu B., &quot;IBM PC and Clones Hardware Trouble Shooting and Maintenance&quot;, TMH, 2002.
UNIT I INTRODUCTION TO RF DESIGN 9 RF behaviour of passive components ­ Chip components and circuit board considerations ­ Review of transmission lines ­ Impedance and admittance transformation ­ Parallel and series connection of networks ­ ABCD and scattering parameters ­ Analysis of amplifier using scattering parameter ­ RF filter ­ Basic resonator and filter configurations ­ Butterworth and chebyshev filters ­ Implementation of microstrip filter design ­ Band pass filter and cascading of band pass filter elements. UNIT II RF TRANSISTOR AMPLIFIER DESIGN 9 Impedance matching using discrete components ­ Microstrip line matching networks ­ Amplifier classes of operation and biasing networks ­ Amplifier power gain­ Unilateral design(S12 =0) ­ Simple input and output matching networks ­ Bilateral design ­ Stability circle and conditional stability ­ Simultaneous conjugate matching for unconditionally stable transistors ­ Broadband amplifiers ­ High power amplifiers and multistage amplifiers. UNIT III DESIGN OF POWER SUPPLIES 9 DC power supply design using transistors and SCR's ­ Design of crowbar and foldback protection circuits ­ Switched Mode Power Supplies(SMPS) ­ Forward ­ Fly back-buck and boost converters ­ Design of transformers and control circuits for SMPS. UNIT IV DESIGN OF DATA ACQUISITION SYSTEMS 9 Amplification of low level signals ­ Grounding ­ Shielding and guarding techniques ­ Dual slope ­ Quad slope and high speed A/D converters ­ Microprocessors compatible A/D converters ­ Multiplying A/D converters and logarithmic A/D converters ­ Sample and hold ­ Design of two and four wire transmitters. UNIT V DESIGN OF PRINTED CIRCUIT BOARDS 9 Introduction to technology of Printed Circuit Boards (PCB) ­ General lay out and rules and parameters ­ PCB design rules for digital ­ High frequency ­ Analog ­ Power electronics and microwave circuits ­ Computer Aided Design(CAD) of PCB's. Total: 45 TEXT BOOKS 1. Reinhold Luduig and Pavel Bretchko, &quot;RF Circuit Design ­ Theory and Applications&quot;, Pearson Education, 2000. 2. Sydney Soclof, &quot;Applications of Analog Integrated Circuits&quot;, PHI, 1990. 3. Walter C. Bosshart, &quot;Printed Circuit Boards ­ Design and Technology&quot;, TMH, 1983. REFERENCES 1. Keith H. Billings, &quot;Handbook of Switched Mode Supplies&quot;, TMH Publishing Co., 1989. 2. Michael Jaacob, &quot;Applications and Design with Analog Integrated Circuits&quot;, PHI, 1991. 3. Otmar Kigenstein, &quot;Switched Mode Power Supplies in Practice&quot;, John Wiley and Sons, 1989. 4. Muhammad H. Rashid, &quot;Power Electronics ­ Circuits, Devices and Applications&quot;, PHI, 2004.
UNIT I ELEMENTS OF LIGHT AND SOLID STATE PHYSICS 9 Wave nature of light ­ Polarization ­ Interference ­ Diffraction ­ Light source ­ Review of quantum mechanical concept ­ Review of solid state physics ­ Review of semiconductor physics and semiconductor junction device. UNIT II DISPLAY DEVICES AND LASERS 9 Introduction ­ Photo luminescence ­ Cathode luminescence ­ Electro luminescence ­ Injection luminescence ­ Injection luminescence ­ LED ­ Plasma display ­ Liquid Crystal Display (LCD) ­ Numeric displays ­ Laser emission ­ Absorption ­ Radiation ­ Population inversion ­ Optical feedback ­ Threshold condition ­ Laser modes ­ Classes of lasers ­ Mode locking ­ Laser applications. UNIT III OPTICAL DETECTION DEVICES 9 Photo detector ­ Thermal detector ­ Photo devices ­ Photo conductors ­ Photo diodes ­ Detector performance. UNIT IV OPTOELECTRONIC MODULATOR 9 Introduction ­ Analog and digital modulation ­ Electro-optic modulators ­ Magneto optic devices ­ Acoustoptic devices ­ Optical ­ Switching and logic devices. UNIT V OPTOELECTRONIC INTEGRATED CIRCUITS 9 Introduction ­ Hybrid and monolithic integration ­ Application of opto electronic integrated circuits ­ Integrated transmitters and receivers ­ Guided wave devices. Total: 45 TEXTBOOK 1. Wilson J and Haukes J., &quot;Opto Electronics ­ An Introduction&quot;, PHI Pvt. Ltd., 1995. REFERENCES 1. Bhattacharya, &quot;Semiconductor Opto Electronic Devices&quot;, PHI Pvt Ltd., 1995. 2. Jasprit Singh, &quot;Opto Electronics ­ As Introduction to Materials and Devices&quot;, TMH International Edition, 1998.
Quality of estimator ­ Estimation of SNR ­ Probability density function and bit error rate ­ Monte Carlo method ­ Importance sampling method ­ Extreme value theory. UNIT IV SIMULATION AND MODELING METHODOLOGY 9 Simulation environment ­ Modeling considerations ­ Performance evaluation techniques ­ Error source simulation ­ Validation. UNIT V CASE STUDIES 9 Simulations of QAM digital radio link in environment ­ Light wave communication link and satellite system. Total: 45 TEXTBOOK 1. Jeruchim M.C, Balaban P and Sam K. Shanmugam, &quot;Simulation of Communication Systems: Modeling, Methodology and Techniques&quot;, Plenum Press, 2001. REFERENCES 1. Averill M. Law and David Kelton W., &quot;Simulation Modeling and Analysis&quot;, TMH Inc., 2000. 2. Geoffrey Gorden, &quot;System Simulation&quot;, 2nd Edition, PHI, 1992. 3. Turin W., &quot;Performance Analysis of Digital Communication Systems&quot;, Computer Science Press, 1990. 4. Jerry Banks and John S. Carson, &quot;Discrete Event System Simulation&quot;, PHI, 1984.
ENGINEERING ACOUSTICS L T P C 3 0 0 3 UNIT I 9 Acoustics waves ­ Linear wave equation ­ Sound in fluids ­ Harmonic plane waves ­ Energy density ­ Acoustics intensity ­ Specific acoustic impedance ­ Spherical waves ­ Describer scales. Reflection and Transmission: Transmission from one fluid to another normal and oblique incidence ­ Method of images. UNIT II RADIATION AND RECEPTION OF ACOUSTIC WAVES 9 Radiation from pulsating sphere ­ Acoustic reciprocity ­ Continuous line source ­ Radiation impedance ­ Fundamental properties of transducers. Absorption and attenuation of sound: Absorption from viscosity ­ Complex sound speed and absorption ­ Classical absorption co-efficient UNIT III PIPE RESONATORS AND FILTERS 9 Resonance in pipes ­ Standing wave pattern absorption of sound in pipes ­ Long wavelength limit ­ Helmoltz resonator ­ Acoustic impedance ­ Reflection and transmission of waves in pipe ­ Acoustic filters ­ Low pass, high pass and band pass. Noise, Signal detection, Hearing and speech: Noise, spectrum level and band level ­ Combing band levels and tones ­ Detecting signals in noise ­ Detection threshold ­ The ear ­ Fundamental properties of hearing ­ Loudness level and loudness ­ Pitch and frequency ­ Voice. UNIT IV ARCHITECTURAL ACOUSTICS 9 Sound in endosure ­ A simple model for the growth of sound in a room ­ Reverberation time ­ Sabine, sound absorption materials ­ Measurement of the acoustic output of sound sources in live rooms ­ Acoustics factor in architectural design. Environmental Acoustics: Weighted sound levels speech interference ­ Highway noise ­ Noise induced hearing loss ­ Noise and architectural design specification and measurement of some isolation design of portions. UNIT V TRANSDUCTION 9 Transducer as an electives network ­ Canonical equation for the two simple transducers transmitters ­ Moving coil loud speaker ­ Loudspeaker cabinets ­ Horn loud speaker, receivers ­ Condenser ­ Microphone ­ Moving coil electrodynamics microphone Piezoelectric microphone ­ Calibration of receivers. Total: 45 TEXT BOOK 1. Lawerence E. Kinsler, Austin R. Frey, Alan B. Coppens and James V. Sanders, &quot;Fundamentals of Acoustics&quot;, 4th Edition, Wiley, 2000. REFERENCE 1. Berarek L., &quot;Acoustics&quot;, TMH, 2002.
UNIT I ROBOT ORGANIZATION 9 Coordinate transformation, kinematics and inverse kinematics ­ Trajectory planning and remote manipulation. UNIT II ROBOT HARDWARE 9 Robot sensors ­ Proximity sensors ­ Range sensors ­ Visual sensors ­ Auditory sensors ­ Robot manipulators ­ Manipulator dynamics ­ Manipulator control ­ Wrists ­ End efforts ­ Robot grippers. UNIT III ROBOT AND ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE 9 Principles of AI ­ Basics of learning ­ Planning movement ­ Basics of knowledge representations ­ Robot programming languages. UNIT IV ROBOTIC VISION SYSTEMS 9 Principles of edge detection ­ Determining optical flow and shape ­ Image segmentation ­ Pattern recognition ­ Model directed scene analysis. UNIT V ROBOT CONTROL AND APPLICATION 9 Robot control using voice and infrared ­ Overview of robot applications ­ Prosthetic devices ­ Robots in material handling, processing assembly and storage. Total: 45 REFERENCES 1. Koren, &quot;Robotics for Engineers&quot;, TMH International Company, 1995. 2. Vokopravotic, &quot;Introduction to Robotics&quot;, Springer, 1988. 3. Rathmill K., &quot;Robot Technology and Application&quot;, Springer, 1985. 4. Charniak and Mc Darmott, &quot;Introduction to Artificial Intelligence&quot;, TMH, 1986. 5. Fu K.S, Gonzally R.C, Lee C.S.G., &quot;Robotics Control, Sensing, Vision and Intelligence&quot;, TMH Book Company, 1997. 6. Barry Leatham and Jones, &quot;Elements of Industrial Robotics&quot;, Pittman Publishing, 1987. 7. Mikell P. Groover, Mitchell Weiss, Roger N. Nagel, Nicholas G. Odrey, &quot;Industrial Robotic Technology Programming and Applications&quot;, TMH Book Company, 1986. 8. Bernard Hodges and Paul Hallam, &quot;Industrial Robotics&quot;, British Library Cataloguing Publication, 1990.
UNIT I PHYSICAL AND WIRELESS MAC LAYER ALTERNATIVES 9 Wired transmission techniques: Design of wireless modems ­ Power efficiency ­ Out of band radiation ­ Applied wireless transmission techniques ­ Short distance base band transmission ­ VWB pulse transmission ­ Broad modems for higher speeds ­ Diversity and smart receiving techniques ­ Random access for data oriented networks ­ Integration of voice and data traffic. UNIT II WIRELESS NETWORK PLANNING AND OPERATION 9 Wireless networks topologies ­ Cellular topology ­ Cell fundamentals signal to interference ratio calculation ­ Capacity expansion techniques ­ Cell splitting ­ Use of directional antennas for cell sectoring ­ Micro cell method ­ Overload cells ­ Channels allocation techniques and capacity expansion FCA ­ Channel borrowing techniques ­ DCA ­ Mobility management ­ Radio resources and power management securities in wireless networks. UNIT III WIRELESS WAN 9 Mechanism to support a mobile environment ­ Communication in the infrastructure ­ IS95 CDMA forward channel ­ IS-95 CDMA reverse channel ­ Pallert and frame formats in IS-95, IMT-2000 ­ Forward channel in W-CDMA and CDMA-2000 ­ Reverse channels in W-CDMA and CDMA-2000 ­ GPRS and higher data rates ­ Short Messaging Service in GPRS mobile application protocols. UNIT IV WIRELESS LAN 9 Historical overviews of the LAN industry ­ Evolution of the WLAN industry ­ Wireless Home Networking ­ IEEE 802.11 ­ The PHY layer ­ MAC layer ­ Wireless ATM ­ HYPER LAN ­ HYPER LAN ­ 2. UNIT V WPAN ANDGEOLOCATION SYSTEMS 9 IEEE 802.15 WPAN ­ Home RF ­ Bluetooth ­ Interface between bluetooth and 802.11 ­ Wireless geolocation technologies for wireless geolocation ­ Geolocation standards for E.911 service. Total: 45 TEXT BOOK 1. Kaveh Pahlavan, Prashant Krishnamoorthy, &quot;Principles of Wireless Networks, ­ A United Approach&quot;, Pearson Education, 2002. REFERENCES 1. Jochen Schiller, &quot;Mobile Communications&quot;, 2nd Edition, Person Education, 2003. 2. Wang X. and Poor H.V., &quot;Wireless Communication Systems&quot;, Pearson Education, 2004. 3. Mallick M., &quot;Mobile and Wireless Design Essentials&quot;, Wiley Publishing Inc. 2003. 4. Nicopolitidis P, Obaidat M.S, Papadimitria G.I, Pomportsis A.S., &quot;Wireless Networks&quot;, John Wiley and Sons, 2003.
Total: 45 TEXT BOOK 1. William Stallings, &quot;Cryptography and Network Security ­ Principles and Practices&quot;, 3rd Edition, Pearson Education, 2003. REFERENCES 1. Atul Kahate, &quot;Cryptography and Network Security&quot;, 2nd Edition, TMH, 2007. 2. Bruce Schneier, &quot;Applied Cryptography&quot;, 2nd Edition, John Wiley and Sons Inc, 2001. 3. Stewart S. Miller, &quot;Wi-Fi Security&quot;, TMH, 2003. 4. Charles B. Pfleeger and Shari Lawrence Pfleeger, &quot;Security in Computing&quot;, 3rd Edition, Pearson Education, 2003.
UNIT I FUZZY SET THEORY 10 Introduction to neuro ­ Fuzzy and soft computing ­ Fuzzy sets ­ Basic definition and terminology ­ Set ­ Theoretic operations ­ Member function formulation and parameterization ­ Fuzzy rules and fuzzy reasoning ­ Extension principle and fuzzy relations ­ Fuzzy if-then rules ­ Fuzzy reasoning ­ Fuzzy inference systems ­ Mamdani fuzzy models ­ Sugeno fuzzy models ­ Tsukamoto fuzzy models ­ Input space partitioning and fuzzy modeling. UNIT II OPTIMIZATION 8 Derivative ­ Based optimization ­ Descent methods ­ The method of steepest descent ­ Classical newton's method ­ Step size determination ­ Derivative ­ Free optimization ­ Genetic algorithms ­ Simulated annealing ­ Random search ­ Downhill simplex search. UNIT III NEURAL NETWORKS 10 Supervised learning neural networks ­ Perceptrons ­ Adaline ­ Backpropagation muti layer perceptrons ­ Radial basis function networks ­ Unsupervised learning neural networks ­ Competitive learning networks ­ Kohonen self-organizing networks ­ Learning vector quantization ­ Hebbian learning. UNIT IV NEURO FUZZY MODELING ` 9 Adaptive neuro ­ Fuzzy inference systems ­ Architecture ­ Hybrid learning algorithm ­ Learning methods that cross­ Fertilize ANFIS and RBFN ­ Coactive neuro fuzzy modeling ­ Framework neuron functions for adaptive networks ­ Neuro fuzzy spectrum. UNIT V APPLICATIONS OF COMPUTATIONAL INTELLIGENCE 8 Printed character recognition ­ Inverse kinematics problems ­ Automobile fuel efficiency prediction ­ Soft computing for color recipe prediction. Total: 45 TEXT BOOK 1. Jang J.S.R, Sun C.T, and Mizutani E., &quot;Neuro­ Fuzzy and Soft Computing&quot;, PHI, Pearson Education, 2004. REFERENCES 1. Timothy J. Ross, &quot;Fuzzy Logic with Engineering Applications&quot;, TMH, 1997. 2. Davis E. Goldberg, &quot;Genetic Algorithms: Search, Optimization and Machine Learning&quot;, Addison Wesley, 1989. 3. Rajasekaran S. and Pai G.A.V., &quot;Neural Networks, Fuzzy Logic and Genetic Algorithms&quot;, PHI, 2003. 4. Eberhart R, Simpson P, and Dobbins R., &quot;Computational Intelligence ­ PC Tools&quot;, AP Professional, 1996.
UNIT I 5 Introduction ­ Invention and creativity ­ Intellectual Property (IP) ­ Importance ­ Protection of IPR ­ Basic types of property (I. movable property II. immovable property and III. intellectual property). UNIT II 10 IP ­ Patents ­ Copyrights and related rights ­ Trade marks and rights arising from trademark registration ­ Definitions ­ Industrial designs and integrated circuits ­ Protection of geographical indications at national and international levels ­ Application procedures. UNIT III 10 International convention relating to intellectual property ­ Establishment of WIPO ­ Mission and activities ­ History ­ General agreement on Trade and Tariff (GATT). UNIT IV 10 Indian position vs WTO and strategies ­ Indian IPR legislations ­ Commitments to WTO ­ Patent ordinance and the bill ­ Draft of a national intellectual property policy ­ Present against unfair competition. UNIT V 10 Case studies on ­ Patents (basumati rice, turmeric, neem, etc.) ­ Copyright and related rights ­ Trade marks ­ Industrial design and integrated circuits ­ Geographic indications ­ Protection against unfair competition. Total: 45 TEXT BOOK 1. Subbaram N.R.,&quot;Handbook of Indian Patent Law and Practice&quot;, Viswanathan S., (Printers and Publishers) Pvt. Ltd., 1998. REFERENCES 1. Eli Whitney, United States Patent Number: 72x, Cotton Gin, 2009. 2. &quot;Intellectual Property Today&quot;, Volume 8, No. 5, 2001, [Www.Iptoday.Com]. 3. &quot;Using the Internet for Non­ Patent Prior Art Searches&quot;, Derwent Ip Matters, July 2000. Www.Ipmatters.Net/Features/000707_Gibbs.Html.

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