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6.02 Introduction to EECS II: Digital Communication Systems (Fall 2012, MIT OCW). Instructors: Prof. Hari Balakrishnan and Prof. George Verghese
666 years, 7 months
24
An introduction to several fundamental ideas in electrical engineering and computer science, using digital communication systems as the vehicle. The three parts of the course - bits, signals, and packets - cover three corresponding layers of abstraction that form the basis of communication systems like the Internet.
The course teaches ideas that are useful in other parts of EECS: abstraction, probabilistic analysis, superposition, time and frequency-domain representations, system design principles and trade-offs, and centralized and distributed algorithms. The course emphasizes connections between theoretical concepts and practice using programming tasks and some experiments with real-world communication channels.
(from ocw.mit.edu)
Course Currilcum
- Lecture 01 – Overview: Information and Entropy Unlimited
- Lecture 02 – Compression: Huffman and LZW Unlimited
- Lecture 03 – Errors, Channel Codes Unlimited
- Lecture 04 – Linear Block Codes, Parity Relations Unlimited
- Lecture 05 – Error Correction, Syndrome Decoding Unlimited
- Lecture 06 – Convolutional Codes Unlimited
- Lecture 07 – Viterbi Decoding Unlimited
- Lecture 08 – Noise Unlimited
- Lecture 09 – Transmitting on a Physical Channel Unlimited
- Lecture 10 – Linear Time-Invariant (LTI) Systems Unlimited
- Lecture 11 – LTI Channel and Intersymbol Interference Unlimited
- Lecture 12 – Filters and Composition Unlimited
- Lecture 13 – Frequency Response of LTI Systems Unlimited
- Lecture 14 – Spectral Representation of Signals Unlimited
- Lecture 15 – Modulation/Demodulation Unlimited
- Lecture 16 – More on Modulation/Demodulation Unlimited
- Lecture 17 – Packet Switching Unlimited
- Lecture 18 – MAC Protocols Unlimited
- Lecture 19 – Network Routing (Without Failures) Unlimited
- Lecture 20 – Network Routing (With Failures) Unlimited
- Lecture 21 – Reliable Transport Unlimited
- Lecture 22 – Sliding Window Analysis, Little’s Law Unlimited
- Lecture 23 – A Brief History of the Internet Unlimited
- Lecture 24 – History of the Internet (cont.), Course Summary Unlimited