Difference between revisions of "2020 AMS-536 Spring (revised syllabus)"
Line 4: | Line 4: | ||
'''THIS IS A REVISED SYLLABUS'''<br> | '''THIS IS A REVISED SYLLABUS'''<br> | ||
'''THIS IS A REVISED SYLLABUS'''<br> | '''THIS IS A REVISED SYLLABUS'''<br> | ||
− | </div | + | </div> |
<br> | <br> | ||
{| align="center" border="2" cellpadding="8" cellspacing="0" style="background:white; text-align:left; width:80%" | {| align="center" border="2" cellpadding="8" cellspacing="0" style="background:white; text-align:left; width:80%" |
Revision as of 14:57, 18 March 2020
THIS IS A REVISED SYLLABUS
THIS IS A REVISED SYLLABUS
THIS IS A REVISED SYLLABUS
THIS IS A REVISED SYLLABUS
Supervisor | Dr. Robert C. Rizzo [631-632-9340, robert.rizzo@stonybrook.edu] |
Instructor | Dr. Guilherme Duarte Ramos Matos [631-632-8519, guilherme dot duarteramosmatos -at- stonybrook dot edu] |
Teaching Assistant | Steve Telehany [631-632-8519, stephen dot telehany - at - stonybrook dot edu] |
Course No. | AMS-536 / CHE-536 |
Location/Time | Math Tower, Room S235 (COMPUTER LAB next to SINC site), Mon/Wed 2:30PM - 3:50PM |
Office Hours | By appointment, Math Tower, Room 3-129, Dept. of Applied Math & Statistics |
Acknowledgments | The AMS-536 instructors would like to thank: (1) Chemical Computing Group at http://www.chemcomp.com for generously providing MOE software teaching licenses |
Grading | Grades will be based on the quality of: (1) the oral presentations (15%); |
Contents
Project Information
Student Project Proposal OHARE Sheet
Oral Presentation Guidelines: These meetings should be formal and your chance to tell a complete story. Talks should be presented in PPT format and be between 20 and 30 minutes long. The purpose of your talks is for you to clearly and concisely present your overall progress to date including appropriate background material and interpretation of your results. Check our guidelines on how not to make a presentation. Talks should be arranged in the following order:
- Introduction/Background (include biological relevance)
- Specifics of Your System
- Computational Details (theory)
- Computational Details (system setup)
- Results and Discussion (include a critical interpretation of your results)
- Conclusions
- Future
- Acknowledgments
Final Report Guidelines and Example Final Papers
Tutorials, Software Links, and Other Relevant Class Information
- Rizzo_Lab_Information_and_Tutorials
- Cheat Sheet:
- Unix Command Guide
- Seawulf Queue Info
- Wikitext Cheat Sheet (for preparing tutorial Wiki page)
- Wikitext Formatting Tips (for making the tutorial Wiki page pretty)
- Chimera Basics - Video
- Chimera Structure Analysis - Video
- Top Pharmaceutical Posters
- DOCK6.9 User Manual
- AMBER 16 User Manual
- Free Energy Calculations
Schedule
- Each participant please update the Wiki as required with the title of your talk.
- Please note that a doctor's excuse will be required if you miss your scheduled oral presentation date because of illness.
Date | Participant | Talk |
SECTION 1: COMPUTING INFRASTRUCTURE AND TOOLS | ||
2020.01.27 Mon | First Day of Class Group Study |
Seawulf accounts setup unix / vim / csh introduction Discuss presentations and final projects (OHARE sheets) |
2020.01.29 Wed | Group Study | Seawulf accounts setup unix / vim / csh introduction Visualization demo's Chimera and VMD |
2020.02.03 Mon | Group Study | Seawulf accounts setup unix / vim / csh introduction Visualization demo's Chimera and VMD |
2020.02.05 Wed | Group Study | Seawulf accounts setup unix / vim / csh introduction Visualization demo's Chimera and VMD |
2020.02.10 Mon | Group Study | Seawulf queuing system |
2020.02.12 Wed | Group Study | Seawulf queuing system Ethics in Writing (Rob) |
SECTION 2: DOCK TUTORIAL ( see Joe Allen slides ) | ||
2020.02.17 Mon | Draft Student Project Proposal OHARE Sheet Due Group Study |
Tutorials: DOCK virtual screening individual project discussion |
2020.02.19 Wed | Group Study | Tutorials: DOCK virtual screening individual project discussion |
2020.02.24 Mon | Final Student Project Proposal OHARE Sheet Due Group Study |
Tutorials: DOCK virtual screening individual project discussion |
2020.02.26 Wed | Group Study | Tutorials: DOCK virtual screening individual project discussion |
2020.03.02 Mon | Group Study | Tutorials: DOCK virtual screening individual project discussion |
2020.03.04 Wed | Group Study | Tutorials: DOCK virtual screening individual project discussion |
2020.03.09 Mon | Group Study | Tutorials: DOCK de novo design individual project discussion |
2020.03.11 Wed | Group Study | Tutorials: DOCK de novo design individual project discussion |
2020.03.16 Mon | Spring Recess | Spring Recess |
2020.03.18 Wed | Spring Recess | Spring Recess |
SECTION 3: AMBER TUTORIAL ( see Lingling Jiang slides ) | ||
2020.03.23 Mon | AMBER prep video Video discussion forum |
Tutorials: AMBER individual project discussion |
2020.03.25 Wed | Group Study | Tutorials: AMBER individual project discussion |
2020.03.30 Mon | Group Study | Tutorials: AMBER individual project discussion |
2020.04.01 Wed | Group Study | Tutorials: AMBER individual project discussion |
2020.04.06 Mon | Group Study | Tutorials: AMBER individual project discussion |
2020.04.08 Wed | Group Study | Tutorials: AMBER finalize class wiki |
SECTION 4: PROJECT PRESENTATIONS | ||
2020.04.13 Mon | Draft Paper Due Oral Presentations |
Oral Presentations |
2020.04.15 Wed | Oral Presentations | Oral Presentations |
2020.04.20 Mon | Oral Presentations | Oral Presentations |
2020.04.22 Wed | Group Study | Project Analysis/Troubleshooting |
2020.04.27 Mon | Draft Paper Due Group Study |
Project Analysis/Troubleshooting |
2020.04.29 Wed | Oral Presentations | Oral Presentations |
2020.05.04 Mon | Oral Presentations | Oral Presentations |
2020.05.06 Wed | Last Day Class Oral Presentations |
Oral Presentations |
2020.05.08 Fri | Final Written Report due by 5PM today. |
Give hard copy printout to Dr. Robert Rizzo (Math Tower room 1-111), Dr. Guilherme Matos (Math Tower room 3-129) or Steve Telehany (Math Tower room 3-129) and email electronic copy to rizzorc -at- gmail dot com and guilherme.duarteramosmatos -at- stonybrook dot edu |
Academic Integrity
Each student must pursue his or her academic goals honestly and be personally accountable for all submitted work. Representing another person's work as your own is always wrong. Faculty is required to report any suspected instances of academic dishonesty to the Academic Judiciary. Faculty in the Health Sciences Center (School of Health Technology & Management, Nursing, Social Welfare, Dental Medicine) and School of Medicine are required to follow their school-specific procedures. For more comprehensive information on academic integrity, including categories of academic dishonesty please refer to the academic judiciary website at [1]
Student Accessibility
If you have a physical, psychological, medical, or learning disability that may impact your course work, please contact the Student Accessibility Support Center, 128 ECC Building, (631) 632-6748, or at sasc@stonybrook.edu. They will determine with you what accommodations are necessary and appropriate. All information and documentation is confidential.
Students who require assistance during emergency evacuation are encouraged to discuss their needs with their professors and the Student Accessibility Support Center. For procedures and information go to the following website: [2] and search Fire Safety and Evacuation and Disabilities.
Critical Incident Management
Stony Brook University expects students to respect the rights, privileges, and property of other people. Faculty are required to report to the Office of University Community Standards any disruptive behavior that interrupts their ability to teach, compromises the safety of the learning environment, or inhibits students' ability to learn. Faculty in the HSC Schools and the School of Medicine are required to follow their school-specific procedures. Further information about most academic matters can be found in the Undergraduate Bulletin, the Undergraduate Class Schedule, and the Faculty-Employee Handbook.