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Fall 2020 Digital Humanities Graduate Certificate Courses

2020年4月21日 00:01

Course offerings are subject to change. Contact department staff or faculty for the most up-to-date information.

 


Biomedical Engineering

BMME 775 (Cross listed with COMP 775): Image Processing & Analysis

TuTh 3:30 PM – 4:45 PM, Sitterson F007, Stephen Pizer

Prerequisites, COMP 665, MATH 547, and STOR 435. Approaches to analysis of digital images. Scale geometry, statistical pattern recognition, optimization. Segmentation, registration, shape analysis. Applications, software tools.Considerable prior experience in programming and mathematics is absolutely necessary for success in grad-level Computer Science courses.
Instructor permission required

 


Communications

COMM 431: Advanced Audio Production

TuTh 9:30 AM – 10:45 AM, Swain Hall 200A, Mark Robinson

Prerequisite, COMM 130 or 150; Grade of C or better in COMM 130; permission of the instructor for students lacking the prerequisite. Advanced analysis and application of the principles and methods of audio production.

 

COMM 635: Documentary Production

Tu 11AM – 12:15 PM, Swain Hall 200A, Julia Haslett

Prerequisite, COMM 230. A workshop in the production of video and/or film nonfiction or documentary projects. The course will focus on narrative, representational, and aesthetic strategies of documentary production.

 

COMM 638: Game Design

TuTh 11AM – 12:00 PM, Swain Hall 115A, Joyce Rudinsky

Prerequisite, COMM 150. Permission of the instructor for non-majors. Studio course that explores gaming critically and aesthetically. Practice in game design and production including three-dimensional worlds and scripting.

 

COMM 654: Motion Graphics, Special Effects, and Compositing

MoWe 12:20PM – 2:15PM, Swain Hall 200A, Edward Rankus 

Prerequisites, COMM 130 or COMM 150 with a C or better, Department Consent Required. In this course course students will learn a wide range of post-production techniques for video projects, using primarily After Effects (and Photoshop to a lesser extent). Topics explored include: Compositing, that is to say the integration and collage-ing of multiple video/film/still/text layers. Motion Graphics deals with the movement through 2D and 3D screen space of these layers, and Visual Effects will consider the myriad ways one can distort, color manipulate, and modify these layers, or create such phenomena as clouds, fire, etc. Besides creating projects using these techniques, we will also screen and analyze how this form of image manipulation is used in television and motion pictures.

 


Computer Science

COMP 410: Data Structures

MoWe 1:25PM – 2:40PM, Genome Sciences Bldg G100, Paul Stotts 

Prerequisite, COMP 401. The analysis of data structures and their associated algorithms. Abstract data types, lists, stacks, queues, trees, and graphs. Sorting, searching, hashing.

 

COMP 411: Computer Organization

Section 001, MoWe 11:15PM – 12:30PM, Genome Sciences Bldg G100, Montek Singh

Section 002, TuTh 3:30 PM – 4:45PM, Murphey 116, Brent Munsell

Prerequisite, COMP 401. Digital logic, circuit components. Data representation, computer architecture and implementation, assembly language programming. Require Recitation

 

COMP 426: Modern Web Programming

TuTh 3:30PM – 4:45PM, Genome Science Bldg G100, Ketan Mayer-Patel 

Prerequisites, COMP 401 and 410. Developing applications for the World Wide Web including both client-side and server-side programming. Emphasis on Model-View-Controller architecture, AJAX, RESTful Web services, and database interaction.

 


English

ENGL 709: Technologies of Literary Production

F 9:05AM – 12:05PM, Greenlaw 526A, Martin Johnson

This course introduces the history of technologies used to produce and circulate literature, from medieval Europe to the twenty-first-century. Proceeding chronologically, this history provides a broad overview of the material conditions of possibility for the emergence of literary form and genre in the Anglophone tradition.


Geography

GEOG 491: Introduction to GIS

MWF 11:15AM – 12:05PM, Carolina Hall 220, Jun Liang

Prerequisite, GEOG 370. Permission of the instructor for students lacking the prerequisite. Stresses the spatial analysis and modeling capabilities of organizing data within a geographic information system. (GISci) Required Recitation

 

GEOG 591: Applied Issues in GIS

TuTh 11:00AM – 12:15PM, Carolina Hall 322, Javier Nazario 

Prerequisite, GEOG 477, 491, or equivalent. Through a novel research workshop format, this graduate and undergraduate course explores political and geographical dimensions of technological change around key environmental issues–energy, water, and waste. The class is largely a research-project oriented course. Examples of the work produced can be found on the course’s page on Digital Atlases and Resource Pages.

 

GEOG 592: Geographic Information Science Programming

MWF 2:00PM – 3:20PM, Carolina Hall 322, Jun Liang 

Prerequisite, GEOG 370 or 491. This course will teach students the elements of GISci software development using major GIS platforms. Students will modularly build a series of applications through the term, culminating in an integrated GIS applications program.

 


Information and Library Science

INLS 509: Information Retrieval

Section 001: Mo 5:45PM – 8:30PM, Manning 001, Jaime Arguello 

Section 002: TuTh 11:00AM – 12:15AM, Manning 208, Yue Wang

Study of information retrieval and question answering techniques, including document classification, retrieval and evaluation techniques, handling of large data collections, and the use of feedback.

 

INLS 520: Organization of Information

Section 001: Tu 11:00AM – 12:15PM, Manning 001, Melanie Feinberg

Section 002: Tu 12:30PM – 1:45PM, Manning 001, Melanie Feinberg

Online, Staff

Introduction to the problems and methods of organizing information, including information structures, knowledge schemata, data structures, terminological control, index language functions, and implications for searching.

 

INLS 523: Intro to Database Concepts and Applications

Section 002: Mo 5:45PM – 8:15PM, Manning 208, Adam Lee

Section 003: TuTh 9:30AM – 10:45AM, Manning 001, Robert Capra

Online, Stephanie Haas

Pre- or corequisite, INLS 161 or 461. Design and implementation of basic database systems. Semantic modeling, relational database theory, including normalization, indexing, and query construction, SQL.

 

INLS 560: Programming for Information Professionals

Section 001: TuTh 2:00PM – 3:15PM, Manning 001, Sayamindu Dasgupta

Online, Gotz

Introduction to programming and computational concepts. Students will learn to write programs using constructs such as iteration, flow control, variables, functions, and error handling. No programming experience required.

 

INLS 572: Web Development I

Section 001: F 11:15 AM – 1:45PM, Manning 001, Joan Boone

Prerequisite, INLS 161 or 461. Introduction to Internet concepts, applications, and services. Introduces the TCP/IP protocol suite along with clients and servers for Internet communication, browsing, and navigation. Examines policy, management, and implementation issues.

 

INLS 573: Mobile Web Development

Section 001: F 11:15 AM – 1:45PM, Manning 001, Joan Boone

An introduction to techniques and technologies for the development of mobile websites and applications. Topics include responsive web design, content strategy for mobile, performance considerations, using mobile frameworks, such as W3.CSS, Bootstrap, and Foundation. Basic Knowledge of HTML is required, and familiarity with CSS and JavaScript is recommended.

 

INLS 582: Systems Analysis

Section 001: MoWe 1:25PM – 2:40PM, Manning 307, Lukasz Mazur 

Section 003: We 5:45PM-8:30PM, Manning 307, Selina Sharmin

Introduction to the systems approach to the design and development of information systems. Methods and tools for the analysis and modeling of system functionality (e.g., structured analysis) and data represented in the system (e.g., object oriented analysis) are studied. Undergraduates are encouraged to take INLS 382 instead of this course.

 

INLS 613: Text Mining

MoWe 11:15AM – 12:30PM, Manning 307, Jaime Arguello

This course will allow the student to develop a general understanding of knowledge discovery and gain a specific understanding of text mining. Students will become familiar with both the theoretical and practical aspects of text mining and develop a proficiency with data modeling text. Offered annually.

 

INLS 623: Database Systems II: Intermediate Databases

We 5:45PM – 8:15PM, Manning 001, Ramanarao Chamarty

Prerequisites, INLS 382 or 582, and 523. Intermediate-level design and implementation of database systems, building on topics studied in INLS 523. Additional topics include MySQL, indexing, XML, and non-text databases.

 

INLS 690-01W: Fundamentals of Programming Applications for Applied Data Science

Rob Capra (1.5 credits)

 

INLS 690-02W: Data Ethics for Applied Data Science

Amelia Gibson (1.5 credits)

 

INLS 690-230: Community Data Lab

Th 2:00PM- 4:45 PM, Manning 304 Amelia Gibson (1.5 credits, meets 10/15/20-12/2/20)

Community data lab is a 1.5 credit course focused on community-facing and community-related datasets, and supporting technology. Students in the course will plan and execute a single (collective) face-to-face or virtual DiscoTech (“Disover Technology” https://www.alliedmedia.org/ddjc/discotech) program focused on the needs of a specific triangle area community. If SILS/UNC is still in the middle of the COVID management, the class will be held online with weekly workshop sessions/check-ins, and the DiscoTech will be a virtual event. Final project materials will be posted publicly on the CEDI Lab website (https://cedi.unc.edu/).  The majority of the semester will be focused on planning For more on DiscoTechs, see https://youtu.be/R3dZScVODPw. 

INLS 690-270: Data Mining: Methods & Applications

TuTh 12:30PM – 1:45PM, Manning 303, Yue Wang

Pre-reqs: INLS 560 and one or more of the following classes; 509, 512, 613 and 625. Recent years have seen explosive growth of data generated from myriad sources, in various formats, and of different quality. Analyzing information and extracting knowledge contained in these data sets become challenging for researchers in many disciplines. Automatic, robust, and intelligent data mining techniques have become essential tools to handle heterogeneous, noisy, unstructured, and large-scale data sets. This is a graduate-level seminar course on advanced topics in data mining. It takes a data-centered perspective by surveying the state-of-the-art methods to analyze different genres of data: item sets, matrices, sequences, texts, images, networks, and more. It will emphasize the practical applications of data mining methods, instead of theoretical foundations of machine learning and statistical inference. The course is suitable not only for students who are doing research in data mining related fields, but also for students who are consumers of data mining techniques in their own disciplines, such as natural language processing, information retrieval, human computer interaction, health informatics, informetrics, digital humanities, and business intelligence.

 

INLS 690-271: Community Archiving

Tu 2:00PM – 4:45PM, Manning 307, Megan Winget

 

INLS 700: Scholarly Communication

TuTh 11:00AM – 12:15PM, Manning 303, Bradley Hemminger

Addresses how scholarship is communicated, shared, and stored. Includes scholars approach to academic work; social relationships within academia; external stakekholders in the scholarly communication system; and emerging technologies’ impact upon work practices. Topics covered include academic libraries and presses, publishing, serials crisis, open access, peer review and bibliometrics. Offered in the fall

 

INLS 718: User Interface Design

Tu 5:45PM – 8:30PM, Manning 208, Fei Yu

Prerequisite: INLS 582. Basic principles for designing the human interface to information systems, emphasizing computer-assisted systems. Major topics: users’ conceptual models of systems, human information processing capabilities, styles of interfaces, and evaluation methods.

 

INLS 720: Metadata

Online,TBA

Examines metadata in the digital environment. Emphasizes the development and implementation of metadata schemas in distinct information communities and the standards and technological applications used to create machine understandable metadata. Explores the limits of metadata standards and critically examines the inevitable role of interpretive diversity for information systems. Our semester-long project will engage the challenge of designing and implementing standards and guidelines for interoperable metadata while acknowledging the messy reality of interpretive diversity.

 

INLS 752: Digital Preservation and Access

Tu 1:25PM – 4:10PM, Manning 14, Tibbo

Focuses on best practices for the creation, provision, and long-term preservation of digital entities. Topics include digitization technologies; standards and quality control; digital asset management; grant writing; and metadata.

 


Media and Journalism

MEJO 581: UX Design and Usability

TuTh 12:30PM – 1:45PM, Carroll 0011, Laura Ruel 

 Prerequisite, MEJO 187. Permission of the instructor for students lacking the prerequisite. Theory and practice of multimedia design with an emphasis on usability, design theory, and evaluative methodologies, including focus groups, survey research, eye-track testing, and search engine optimization.

 

MEJO 582: Advanced Documentary Storytelling

MoWe 2:00PM – 3:45PM, Carroll 0060, Chad Heartwood

MoWe 12:00PM – 1:45PM, Carroll 0060, Chad Heartwood

Permission of the instructor. Students work on a semester-long documentary multimedia project that includes photo and video journalists, audio recordists, designers, infographics artists, and programmers. Open by application to students who have completed an advanced course in visual or electronic communication.

 

MEJO 585: 3D Design Studio

MoWe 8:00AM – 9:45AM, Carroll 0059, Spencer Barnes

Prerequisites, MEJO 187 and 182. Permission of the instructor. The use of 3D design and animation to create visual explanations.

 

MEJO 671: Social Media Marketing Campaigns

MoWe 12:30PM – 1:45PM, Carroll 340A, Seth Noar

Social marketing is the application of marketing concepts and practices to bring about behavior change for a social good. This course is designed as a service learning course and fulfills the experiential education requirement.

 

MEJO 721: Usability and Multimedia

TBA, Melissa Eggleston

Introduces students to five basic areas of multimedia design and develops expertise in each. By examining the latest eye-tracking research and usability testing, students will assess the practical application of many concepts. Through critiques and original storyboards, students will work to expertly integrate all this knowledge into well-designed packages

 

MEJO 782: Multimedia Storytelling

TuTh 3:30PM – 5:15PM, TBA, Laura Ruel 

Theories and practices of multimedia content creation. Students gain critical understanding of various multimedia presentation methods. Hands-on experience with audio/video collection/editing.

Spring 2020 Digital Humanities Certificate Classes

2019年12月13日 04:19

Course offerings are subject to change. Contact department staff or faculty for the most up-to-date information.


 

Communications

 

COMM 635: Documentary Production

TuTh 9:30AM – 12:15 PM, Swain Hall 106A, Julia Haslett

Prerequisite, COMM 230. A workshop in the production of video and/or film nonfiction or documentary projects. The course will focus on narrative, representational, and aesthetic strategies of documentary production.

COMM 638: Game Design

TuTh 11:00AM – 12:15 PM, Swain Hall 115A, Joyce Rudinsky

Prerequisite, COMM 150. Permission of the instructor for non-majors. Studio course that explores gaming critically and aesthetically. Practice in game design and production including three-dimensional worlds and scripting.

 

COMM 650: Cultural Politics of Global Media Culture

MoWe 1:25PM- 2:40 PM, Phillips 228, Michael Palm

Prerequisite, COMM 140. Permission of the instructor for students lacking the prerequisite. Primary subjects will be popular culture and media technology, and guiding questions will be organized around the relationships of each to commerce and/as social change.

 

COMM 654: Motion Graphics, Special Effects, and Compositing

MoWe 9:05AM – 10:05AM, Swain Hall 108A, Edward Rankus 

Prerequisites, COMM 130 or COMM 150 with a C or better, Department Consent Required. In this course course students will learn a wide range of post-production techniques for video projects, using primarily After Effects (and Photoshop to a lesser extent). Topics explored include: Compositing, that is to say the integration and collage-ing of multiple video/film/still/text layers. Motion Graphics deals with the movement through 2D and 3D screen space of these layers, and Visual Effects will consider the myriad ways one can distort, color manipulate, and modify these layers, or create such phenomena as clouds, fire, etc. Besides creating projects using these techniques, we will also screen and analyze how this form of image manipulation is used in television and motion pictures.

 

COMM 666: Media in Performance

TBA

In Media in Performance, students will acquire advanced skills and explore critical approaches that are necessary for creating advanced, professional multi-media works in concert with live performance. Working collaboratively, using text, music, and devising processes, students will refine their understanding of the concepts and processes of creating multi-media theatre and build performance works that marry live and mediated elements in a fully integrated experience.

 


Computer Science

COMP 410: Data Structures

MoWe 1:25PM – 2:40PM, Stone Center 103, Paul Stotts 

Prerequisite, COMP 401. The analysis of data structures and their associated algorithms. Abstract data types, lists, stacks, queues, trees, and graphs. Sorting, searching, hashing.

 

COMP 411: Computer Organization

MoWe 11:15AM – 12:30PM, Coker 201, Montek Singh

TuTh 3:30PM – 4:45PM, Sitterson 0014, Brent Munsell

Prerequisite, COMP 401. Digital logic, circuit components. Data representation, computer architecture and implementation, assembly language programming.

 

COMP 585: Serious Games

MoWe 11:15AM – 12:30PM, Sitterson 011, Diane Pozefsky

Fr 11:15AM – 12:30PM, Sitterson 0014, Diane Pozefsky

Prerequisite, COMP 410 or 411. Concepts of computer game development and their application beyond entertainment to fields such as education, health, and business. Course includes team development of a game.

 


Geography

GEOG 491: Introduction to GIS

TuTh 11:00AM – 12:15PM, Carolina Hall 0220, Andres Vina-Vizcaino

Prerequisite, GEOG 370. Permission of the instructor for students lacking the prerequisite. Stresses the spatial analysis and modeling capabilities of organizing data within a geographic information system. (GISci)

 

GEOG 591: Applied Issues in GIS

TuTh 9:30AM – 10:45AM, Carolina Hall 0322, Jun Liang

Prerequisite, GEOG 477, 491, or equivalent. Through a novel research workshop format, this graduate and undergraduate course explores political and geographical dimensions of technological change around key environmental issues–energy, water, and waste. The class is largely a research-project oriented course. Examples of the work produced can be found on the course’s page on Digital Atlases and Resource Pages.

 

GEOG 592: Geographic Information Science Programming

TuTh 12:30AM – 1:45AM, Carolina Hall 0322, Jun Liang 

Prerequisite, GEOG 370 or 491. This course will teach students the elements of GISci software development using major GIS platforms. Students will modularly build a series of applications through the term, culminating in an integrated GIS applications program.

 


Information and Library Science

INLS 509: Information Retrieval

Section 001: Mo 5:45PM – 8:30PM, Manning 001, Jaime Arguello

Section 002: TuTh 9:30AM – 10:45AM, Manning 208, Yue Wang

Study of information retrieval and question answering techniques, including document classification, retrieval and evaluation techniques, handling of large data collections, and the use of feedback.

 

INLS 512: Applications of Natural Language Processing

TuTh 12:30PM – 1:35PM, Manning 001, Stephanie Haas

Prerequisite: COMP 110, COMP 116, or COMP 121.
Students with graduate standing in SILS may take the course without the prerequisite. Applications of natural language processing techniques and the representations and processes needed to support them. Topics include interfaces, text retrieval, machine translation, speech processing, and text generation. Cross-listed as COMP 486.

 

INLS 520: Organization of Information

Section 001: Tu 2:00PM – 4:45PM, Manning 301, Megan Winget

Section 002: Tu 5:45PM – 8:30PM, Manning 307, Megan Winget

Introduction to the problems and methods of organizing information, including information structures, knowledge schemata, data structures, terminological control, index language functions, and implications for searching.

 

INLS 523: Intro to Database Concepts and Applications

Section 001: Mo 5:45PM – 8:30PM, Manning 208, Adam Lee

Section 002: TuTh 12:30PM – 1:45PM, Manning 307, Eric Chernoff

Section 003: Web, Stephanie Haas

Pre- or corequisite, INLS 161 or 461. Design and implementation of basic database systems. Semantic modeling, relational database theory, including normalization, indexing, and query construction, SQL.

 

INLS 525: Electronic Record Management

Web, Heather Barnes

Explores relationships between new information and communication technologies and organizational efforts to define, identify, control, manage, and preserve records. Considers the importance of organizational, institutional and technological factors in determining appropriate recordkeeping strategies.

 

INLS 541: Information Visualization 

MoWe 10:10AM – 11:25PM, Manning 307, Bradley Hemminger

An introduction to information visualization through reading current literature and studying exemplars. The course reviews information visualization techniques, provides a framework for identifying the need for information visualization, and emphasizes interactive electronic visualizations that use freely available tools. Students will construct several visualizations. No programming skills are required.

 

INLS 560: Programming for Information Professionals

Section 001: TuTh 12:30PM – 1:45PM, Manning 014, Sayamindu Dasgupta

Section 002: Th 5:45PM – 8:30PM, Manning 014, Jason Carter

Online, Stephen Pearson

Introduction to programming and computational concepts. Students will learn to write programs using constructs such as iteration, flow control, variables, functions, and error handling. No programming experience required.

 

INLS 572: Web Development I

Section 001: TuTh 9:30AM – 10:45AM, Manning 0014, Joan Boone

meets 1/9/2020-2/25/2020

Prerequisite, INLS 161 or 461. Introduction to Internet concepts, applications, and services. Introduces the TCP/IP protocol suite along with clients and servers for Internet communication, browsing, and navigation. Examines policy, management, and implementation issues.Introduction to programming and computational concepts. Students will learn to write programs using constructs such as iteration, flow control, variables, functions, and error handling. No programming experience required.

 

INLS 573: Mobile Web Development

Section 001: TuTh 9:30AM – 10:45AM, Manning 0014, Joan Boone

meets 2/27/2020-4/23/2020

An introduction to techniques and technologies for the development of mobile websites and applications. Topics include responsive web design, content strategy for mobile, performance considerations, using mobile frameworks, such as W3.CSS, Bootstrap, and Foundation. Basic Knowledge of HTML is required, and familiarity with CSS and JavaScript is recommended.

 

INLS 582: Systems Analysis

Section 001: MoWe 1:25PM – 2:40PM, Manning 307, Lukasz Mazur 

Section 002: We 5:45PM – 8:30PM, Manning 001, Selina Sharmin

Introduction to the systems approach to the design and development of information systems. Methods and tools for the analysis and modeling of system functionality (e.g., structured analysis) and data represented in the system (e.g., object oriented analysis) are studied. Undergraduates are encouraged to take INLS 382 instead of this course.

 

INLS 613: Text Mining

Section 001: MoWe 10:10AM – 11:25AM, Manning 001, Jaime Arguello

This course will allow the student to develop a general understanding of knowledge discovery and gain a specific understanding of text mining. Students will become familiar with both the theoretical and practical aspects of text mining and develop a proficiency with data modeling text. Offered annually.

 

INLS 623: Database Systems II: Intermediate Databases

We 5:45PM – 8:30PM, Manning 208, Ramanarao Chamarty

Prerequisites, INLS 382 or 582, and 523. Intermediate-level design and implementation of database systems, building on topics studied in INLS 523. Additional topics include MySQL, indexing, XML, and non-text databases.

 

INLS 718: User Interface Design

Tu 5:45PM – 8:30PM, Manning 208, Fei Yu

Prerequisite: INLS 582. Basic principles for designing the human interface to information systems, emphasizing computer-assisted systems. Major topics: users’ conceptual models of systems, human information processing capabilities, styles of interfaces, and evaluation methods.

 

INLS 740: Digital Libraries 

Online, Grace Shin

Research and development issues in digital libraries, including collection development and digitization; mixed mode holdings; access strategies and interfaces; metadata and interoperability; economic and social policies; and management and evaluation.

 

INLS 756: Data Curation and Management

Online, Helen Tibbo

Explores data curation lifecycle activities from design of good data, through content creator management, metadata creation, ingest into a repository, repository management, access policies, and implementation, and data reuse.

 


Music

MUSC 676: Digital Media and Live Performance

Mo 4:00PM-6:45PM, Swain 104, Joseph Megel, Lee Weisert


Media and Journalism

MEJO 581: UX Design and Usability

TuTh 12:30PM – 1:45PM, Carroll 011, Laura Ruel

Prerequisite, MEJO 187. Permission of the instructor for students lacking the prerequisite. Theory and practice of multimedia design with an emphasis on usability, design theory, and evaluative methodologies, including focus groups, survey research, eye-track testing, and search engine optimization.

 

MEJO 583: Advanced Interactive Media

MoWe 12:00PM-1:45PM, Carroll 0058, Steven King

Prerequisite, JOMC 187. Permission of the school. Advanced course in multimedia programming languages that includes designing and building dynamic projects.

 

MEJO 671: Social Marketing Campaigns

TuTh 9:30AM-10:45AM, Carroll 0058, Seth Noar

Social marketing is the application of marketing concepts and practices to bring about behavior change for a social good. This course is designed as a service learning course and fulfills the experiential education requirement.

 

MEJO 712: Visual Communication and Multimedia

Section 001: TBA, Melissa Eggleston

Section 002: TBA, Xiaoxin Zhu

Focusing on the new communication technologies that have created new media, new language and new visual interfaces, this course introduces the student to principles and concepts of visual communication and design and how they are being used in this new cyber medium. Students will learn the rich history of visual images and the conceptual framework of visual communication.

They will examine elements of visual images to learn basic design theory and techniques. These visual information concepts will then be applied to the Internet. Students will learn to analyze how diverse visual elements are used in graphics and graphics design, page design, site planning and navigation, and computer system and human interface design, as well as usability, navigation and accessibility. This course is offered online. JOMC 712 is open to non-JOMC graduate students on a space-available basis.

Charlotte Fryar Digital Dissertation

2019年5月4日 02:44

The Digital Innovation Lab would like to congratulate Charlotte Fryar on completing her digital dissertation, Reclaiming the University of the People: Racial Justice Movements at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Fryar was a 2018 Digital Dissertation Fellow, and has now completed a fully digital dissertation—a first in the humanities at UNC-CH. In addition to her connection to the Digital Innovation Lab through the digital dissertation fellowship, Fryar completed the Digital Humanities Graduate Certificate and worked for several years as a graduate research assistant in the Digital Innovation Lab.

Completed as a documentary website, Fryar’s project includes essays, maps, and audio archives that “interpret the history of how Black students and workers engaged in movements for racial justice at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill from 1951 to 2018 and challenged the University’s dominant cultural landscape of white supremacy.” Using a methodology that brings together public digital humanities and oral histories, Fryar has created a resource for anyone looking into racial justice at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

Congratulations Charlotte!

Fall 2019 Digital Humanities Certificate Classes

2019年3月23日 00:27

Course offerings are subject to change. Contact department staff or faculty for the most up-to-date information.


American Studies 

AMST 671: Introduction to Public History

Tu 3:30 PM – 6:00 PM, Carolina Hall 322, Anne Whisnant

Introduces the theory, politics, and practice of historical work conducted in public venues (museums, historic sites, national parks, government agencies, archives), directed at public audiences, or addressed to public issues.


Art History 

ARTH 851: alt-Methods: Digital Art History

TuTh 9:30 AM – 10:45 AM, Caldwell Hall 208, JJ Bauer

This course introduces students to current digital art history projects and practices as well as methods for approaching art historical research in new ways. We will explore concepts and case studies in digital art history and the digital humanities, experiment with software and tools, and discuss emerging trends and developments in the discipline as well as professional opportunities.


Biomedical Engineering

BMME 775 (Cross listed with COMP 775): Image Processing & Analysis

TBA, TBA, TBA

Prerequisites, COMP 665, MATH 547, and STOR 435. Approaches to analysis of digital images. Scale geometry, statistical pattern recognition, optimization. Segmentation, registration, shape analysis. Applications, software tools.Considerable prior experience in programming and mathematics is absolutely necessary for success in grad-level Computer Science courses.
Instructor permission required

 


Communications

COMM 431: Advanced Audio Production

TuTh 9:30 AM – 10:45 AM, Swain Hall 200A, Mark Robinson

Prerequisite, COMM 130 or 150; Grade of C or better in COMM 130; permission of the instructor for students lacking the prerequisite. Advanced analysis and application of the principles and methods of audio production.

COMM 453: Everyday Media Technology 

TuTh 2PM – 3:15 PM, Dey Hall 208, Michael Palm

Prerequisite, COMM 140. The starting point for this course, chronologically and conceptually, is the emergence of popular media technology. Our purview includes transformative innovations in mediated communication, such as telephony and e-mail, alongside familiar media technologies such as televisions and computers.

 

COMM 635: Documentary Production

TuTh 11AM – 12:15 PM, Swain Hall 106A, Julia Haslett

Prerequisite, COMM 230. A workshop in the production of video and/or film nonfiction or documentary projects. The course will focus on narrative, representational, and aesthetic strategies of documentary production.

COMM 638: Game Design

TuTh 11AM – 12:15 PM, Swain Hall 115A, Joyce Rudinsky

Prerequisite, COMM 150. Permission of the instructor for non-majors. Studio course that explores gaming critically and aesthetically. Practice in game design and production including three-dimensional worlds and scripting.

COMM 644: Documentary Production: First Person Filmmaking

TuTh 12:30PM- 1:45 PM, Swain Hall 106A, Julia Haslett

Prerequisite, COMM 230. Permission of the instructor for students lacking the prerequisite. Students create documentaries emphasizing the filmmaker’s personal perspective and experience: essay, diary, and autobiographical films, and pieces in which the filmmaker performs a role for expressive or political ends. Significant class time is devoted to work-shopping student films.

 

COMM 654: Motion Graphics, Special Effects, and Compositing

MoWe 12:20PM – 2:15PM, Swain Hall 106A, Edward Rankus 

Prerequisites, COMM 130 or COMM 150 with a C or better, Department Consent Required. In this course course students will learn a wide range of post-production techniques for video projects, using primarily After Effects (and Photoshop to a lesser extent). Topics explored include: Compositing, that is to say the integration and collage-ing of multiple video/film/still/text layers. Motion Graphics deals with the movement through 2D and 3D screen space of these layers, and Visual Effects will consider the myriad ways one can distort, color manipulate, and modify these layers, or create such phenomena as clouds, fire, etc. Besides creating projects using these techniques, we will also screen and analyze how this form of image manipulation is used in television and motion pictures.

 


Computer Science

COMP 410: Data Structures

MoWe 1:25PM – 2:40PM, Genome Sciences Bldg G100, Paul Stotts 

Prerequisite, COMP 401. The analysis of data structures and their associated algorithms. Abstract data types, lists, stacks, queues, trees, and graphs. Sorting, searching, hashing.

 

COMP 411: Computer Organization

Section 001, MoWeFr 1:25PM – 2:40PM, Sitterson 0014, Henry Fuchs

Section 002, MoWeFr 11:15AM – 12:30PM, Caroll 0111, Montek Singh

Prerequisite, COMP 401. Digital logic, circuit components. Data representation, computer architecture and implementation, assembly language programming.

 

COMP 426: Modern Web Programming

TuTh 3:30PM – 4:45PM, Genome Science Bldg G100, Ketan Mayer-Patel 

Prerequisites, COMP 401 and 410. Developing applications for the World Wide Web including both client-side and server-side programming. Emphasis on Model-View-Controller architecture, AJAX, RESTful Web services, and database interaction.

 


English

ENGL 801: Research Methods in Rhetoric Composition

TuTh 11:00AM – 1:50PM, Greenlaw 301, Jordynn Jack 

This course explores the impacts of information technology on teaching and scholarship in the humanities. Students critique and learn to integrate emerging technologies into their pedagogy and research interests.


Geography

GEOG 410: Modelling of Environmental Systems

TuTh 11:00AM – 12:15PM, Carolina Hall 0322, Conghe Song

Uses systems theory and computer models to understand ecosystem energy and matter flows, such as energy flow in food webs, terrestrial ecosystem evapotranspiration and productivity, related to climate, vegetation, soils, and hydrology across a range of spatial and temporal scales.

 

GEOG 491: Introduction to GIS

TuTh 2:00PM – 3:15PM, Carolina Hall 0220, Xiaodong Chen

Prerequisite, GEOG 370. Permission of the instructor for students lacking the prerequisite. Stresses the spatial analysis and modeling capabilities of organizing data within a geographic information system. (GISci)

 

GEOG 541: GIS for Public Health

Mo 3:35PM – 6:35PM, Carolina Hall 0322, Paul Delamater

Explores theory and application of geographic information systems (GIS) for public health. The course includes an overview of the principles of GIS in public health and practical experience in its use. (GISci)

 

GEOG 591: Applied Issues in GIS

TuTh 9:30AM – 10:45AM, Carolina Hall 0322, Jun Liang

Prerequisite, GEOG 477, 491, or equivalent. Through a novel research workshop format, this graduate and undergraduate course explores political and geographical dimensions of technological change around key environmental issues–energy, water, and waste. The class is largely a research-project oriented course. Examples of the work produced can be found on the course’s page on Digital Atlases and Resource Pages.

 

GEOG 592: Geographic Information Science Programming

TuTh 2:00PM – 3:15PM, Carolina Hall 0322, Jun Liang 

Prerequisite, GEOG 370 or 491. This course will teach students the elements of GISci software development using major GIS platforms. Students will modularly build a series of applications through the term, culminating in an integrated GIS applications program.

GEOG 650: Technology and Democracy

TuTh 2:00PM – 3:15PM, Hamilton Hall 150, Scott Kirsch

Are technological choices open to democratic participation? Through a novel research workshop format, this graduate and undergraduate course explores political and geographical dimensions of technological change around key environmental issues–energy, water, and waste. The class is largely a research-project oriented course. Examples of the work produced can be found on the course’s page on Digital Atlases and Resource Pages.

 


Information and Library Science

INLS 509: Information Retrieval

Section 001: Mo 5:45PM – 8:30PM, Manning 001, Jaime Arguello 

Section 002: TuTh 9:30AM – 10:45AM, Manning 208, Yue Wang

Study of information retrieval and question answering techniques, including document classification, retrieval and evaluation techniques, handling of large data collections, and the use of feedback.

 

INLS 520: Organization of Information

Section 001: Tu 2:00PM – 4:45PM, Manning 307, Megan Winget 

Section 002: Tu 5:45PM – 8:15PM, Manning 307, Megan Winget

Online, Staff

Introduction to the problems and methods of organizing information, including information structures, knowledge schemata, data structures, terminological control, index language functions, and implications for searching.

 

INLS 523: Intro to Database Concepts and Applications

Section 001: MoWe 12:20PM – 1:35PM, Manning 001, Eric Chernoff

Section 002: Mo 5:45PM – 8:15PM, Manning 117, Adam Lee

Section 003: TuTh 9:30AM – 10:45AM, Manning 001, Robert Capra

Online, Staff

Pre- or corequisite, INLS 161 or 461. Design and implementation of basic database systems. Semantic modeling, relational database theory, including normalization, indexing, and query construction, SQL.

 

INLS 525: Electronic Record Management

Th 5:45PM – 8:15PM, Manning 208, Alexandra Chassanoff

Explores relationships between new information and communication technologies and organizational efforts to define, identify, control, manage, and preserve records. Considers the importance of organizational, institutional and technological factors in determining appropriate recordkeeping strategies.

 

INLS 534: Youth and Technology in Libraries

We 10:10AM – 12:40PM, Manning 014, Sandra Hughes- Hassell 

This course encourages students to explore the array of technologies available to children and adolescents, the issues surrounding the use of technology, the role of care givers, and potential impacts on development.

 

INLS 560: Programming for Information Professionals

Section 001: TuTh 11:00AM – 12:15PM, Manning 117, Boone

Section 002: Th 5:45PM – 8:30PM, Manning 001, Jason Carter

Online, Gotz

Introduction to programming and computational concepts. Students will learn to write programs using constructs such as iteration, flow control, variables, functions, and error handling. No programming experience required.

 

INLS 582: Systems Analysis

Section 001: MoWe 1:25PM – 2:40PM, Manning 307, Lukasz Mazur 

Section 002: Mo 5:45PM – 8:30PM, Manning 307, Staff

Section 003: We 5:45PM-8:30PM, Manning 307, Andreas Orphanides

Introduction to the systems approach to the design and development of information systems. Methods and tools for the analysis and modeling of system functionality (e.g., structured analysis) and data represented in the system (e.g., object oriented analysis) are studied. Undergraduates are encouraged to take INLS 382 instead of this course.

 

INLS 613: Text Mining

MoWe 11:15AM – 12:30PM, Manning 307, Jaime Arguello

This course will allow the student to develop a general understanding of knowledge discovery and gain a specific understanding of text mining. Students will become familiar with both the theoretical and practical aspects of text mining and develop a proficiency with data modeling text. Offered annually.

 

INLS 620: Web Information Organization

TuTh 11:00AM – 12:15PM, Manning 208, Patrick Golden

Prerequisites, INLS 520 or 560. Similar programming background needed. Understand the Web as a platform for information organization systems. Learn how the Web has been designed to be a service platform, data publishing platform, and application platform.

 

INLS 623: Database Systems II: Intermediate Databases

We 5:45PM – 8:15PM, Manning 001, Ramanarao Chamarty

Prerequisites, INLS 382 or 582, and 523. Intermediate-level design and implementation of database systems, building on topics studied in INLS 523. Additional topics include MySQL, indexing, XML, and non-text databases.

 

INLS 700: Scholarly Communication

TuTh 11:00AM – 12:15PM, Manning 304, Bradley Hemminger

Addresses how scholarship is communicated, shared, and stored. Includes scholars approach to academic work; social relationships within academia; external stakekholders in the scholarly communication system; and emerging technologies’ impact upon work practices. Topics covered include academic libraries and presses, publishing, serials crisis, open access, peer review and bibliometrics. Offered in the fall

 

INLS 718: User Interface Design

Tu 5:45PM – 8:30PM, Manning 208, Fei Yu

Prerequisite: INLS 582. Basic principles for designing the human interface to information systems, emphasizing computer-assisted systems. Major topics: users’ conceptual models of systems, human information processing capabilities, styles of interfaces, and evaluation methods.

 

INLS 720: Metadata

Online,TBA

Examines metadata in the digital environment. Emphasizes the development and implementation of metadata schemas in distinct information communities and the standards and technological applications used to create machine understandable metadata. Explores the limits of metadata standards and critically examines the inevitable role of interpretive diversity for information systems. Our semester-long project will engage the challenge of designing and implementing standards and guidelines for interoperable metadata while acknowledging the messy reality of interpretive diversity.

 

INLS 752: Digital Preservation and Access

Tu 2:00PM – 4:45PM, Manning 304, Tibbo

Focuses on best practices for the creation, provision, and long-term preservation of digital entities. Topics include digitization technologies; standards and quality control; digital asset management; grant writing; and metadata.

 


Media and Journalism

MEJO 581: UX Design and Usability

TuTh 12:30PM – 1:45PM, Carroll 0011, Laura Ruel 

 Prerequisite, MEJO 187. Permission of the instructor for students lacking the prerequisite. Theory and practice of multimedia design with an emphasis on usability, design theory, and evaluative methodologies, including focus groups, survey research, eye-track testing, and search engine optimization.

 

MEJO 582: Advanced Documentary Storytelling

MoWe 2:00PM – 3:45PM, Carroll 0060, Chad Stevens

Permission of the instructor. Students work on a semester-long documentary multimedia project that includes photo and video journalists, audio recordists, designers, infographics artists, and programmers. Open by application to students who have completed an advanced course in visual or electronic communication.

 

MEJO 585: 3D Design Studio

MoWe 8:00AM – 9:45AM, Carroll 0059, Spencer Barnes

Prerequisites, MEJO 187 and 182. Permission of the instructor. The use of 3D design and animation to create visual explanations.

 

MEJO 671: Social Media Marketing Campaigns

MoWe 12:30PM – 1:45PM, Carroll 340A, Seth Noar

Social marketing is the application of marketing concepts and practices to bring about behavior change for a social good. This course is designed as a service learning course and fulfills the experiential education requirement.

 

MEJO 721: Usability and Multimedia

TBA, Laura Ruel

Introduces students to five basic areas of multimedia design and develops expertise in each. By examining the latest eye-tracking research and usability testing, students will assess the practical application of many concepts. Through critiques and original storyboards, students will work to expertly integrate all this knowledge into well-designed packages

 

MEJO 782: Multimedia Storytelling

TuTh 3:30PM – 5:15PM, Carroll 058, Laura Ruel 

Theories and practices of multimedia content creation. Students gain critical understanding of various multimedia presentation methods. Hands-on experience with audio/video collection/editing.

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