Difference between revisions of "2020 AMS-535 Fall"
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*Students will have 24 hours to completed each Quiz. Late Quizzes will not be accepted. | *Students will have 24 hours to completed each Quiz. Late Quizzes will not be accepted. | ||
*Quiz question answers should integrate topics, concepts, and outcomes of the different papers covered for the section being tested. | *Quiz question answers should integrate topics, concepts, and outcomes of the different papers covered for the section being tested. | ||
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'''Recording Your Oral Presentations Using Zoom:''' It is very straightforward to create a video of yourself giving a PPT presentation using Zoom: | '''Recording Your Oral Presentations Using Zoom:''' It is very straightforward to create a video of yourself giving a PPT presentation using Zoom: | ||
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*Follow the above steps to create your "full-length" video presentation (videos should not exceed 20-25 minutes) | *Follow the above steps to create your "full-length" video presentation (videos should not exceed 20-25 minutes) | ||
*Email your video to ALL Instructors who will make it available to the class (please name your Zoom video Lastname_Paper1.mp4 or Lastname_Paper2.mp4 ) | *Email your video to ALL Instructors who will make it available to the class (please name your Zoom video Lastname_Paper1.mp4 or Lastname_Paper2.mp4 ) | ||
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'''Oral Presentation Guidelines:''' Pre-recorded talks should be formal (as if at a scientific meeting or job talk), presented in PPT format, and be 25-30 minutes long. All talks will be posted on the course website. References should occur at the bottom of each slide when necessary. Presentations should be based mostly on the primary references however secondary references and other sources may be required to make some presentations complete. It is the responsibility of each presenter to email their talk by Friday at 5PM before the week in which their talk is being discussed. Talks will likely be arranged in the following order: | '''Oral Presentation Guidelines:''' Pre-recorded talks should be formal (as if at a scientific meeting or job talk), presented in PPT format, and be 25-30 minutes long. All talks will be posted on the course website. References should occur at the bottom of each slide when necessary. Presentations should be based mostly on the primary references however secondary references and other sources may be required to make some presentations complete. It is the responsibility of each presenter to email their talk by Friday at 5PM before the week in which their talk is being discussed. Talks will likely be arranged in the following order: |
Revision as of 15:18, 22 August 2020
Please see http://ringo.ams.sunysb.edu/~rizzo for Rizzo Group Homepage
Instructor | Dr. Robert C. Rizzo [631-632-8519, rizzorc -at- gmail.com]
Dr. Guilherme Duarte Ramos Matos [631-632-8519, guilherme dot duarteramosmatos -at- stonybrook dot edu] John Bickel [631-632-8519, john dot bickel -at- stonybrook dot edu] |
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Course No. | AMS-535 / CHE-535 |
Location/Time | Online, Monday and Wednesday 2:40PM - 4:00PM |
Office Hours | Anytime by appointment, Math Tower 3-129 |
Grading | Grades will be based on the quality of: (1) Pre-recorded oral presentations (25%)
(2) Class discussion (30%)
(3) Take home quizzes (45%)
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Online Syllabus Notes
As a result of the COVID-19 outbreak this course is being offered online. This is a mixed course meaning that there will be both synchronous and asynchronous aspects. Note that course grading criteria has been modified from previous years (see grading breakdown above). Other details for this semester are as follows:
General Information:
- We will hold class at the regularly scheduled time (M/W 2:40-4:00PM) however this will be done online via ZOOM.
- The first 5 lectures are to help put everyone on an even footing with regards to background material and will be given by the Instructors at the regularly scheduled class time and will be made available on the class website.
- All class correspondence should be addressed to ALL course Instructors.
Discussion Sessions:
- The bulk of the classes will be devoted to Discussion of papers read prior to coming to class (2 per class) for which everyone will also have watched oral presentations prior to coming to class (2 per class). Oral presentations will be in the form of pre-recorded videos made by students taking the class.
- During the Discussion sessions (ZOOM breakout rooms) the Instructors will ask participants to explain details of the papers they have read which will form the basis of the "Discussion" part of their grade. Thus, it is important that everyone attend all of the synchronous classes. All students are expected to participate especially those whose papers are being discussed that day. Breakout room discussion will NOT be recorded.
- If a student is unable to attend an online class they will instead be asked to submit a one page Paper Summary Sheet answering questions about the papers that were discussed on the day that they missed. The "Paper Summary Sheets" will form the basis of the "Discussion" part of their grade for any synchronous classes that were missed.
- If a students misses an online class they will have 24 hours to submit their Paper Summary Sheets. Late Paper Summary Sheets will not be accepted.
Oral Presentations:
- Students will pre-record 2 different ZOOM presentations based on 2 different papers from the schedule shown below.
- Students will email their pre-recorded presentations to ALL course Instructors by Friday at 5PM before the week in which their presentations will be discussed.
- Course participants will watch the student presentations before the class in which they are to be discussed.
- Course participants will score each student presentation using a Presentation Assessment Sheet which will be emailed to ALL Instructors within 24 hours after the class in which the presentation were discussed.
Take home Quizzes:
- At the end of each of the five different sections of the course a take home quiz will be assigned. The "Quiz" portion of the grade will based on the four highest quiz scores attained.
- Although the Quiz format is open book, students are expected to work alone and do their own work. Representing another person's work as your own is always wrong. The Instructors are required to report any suspected instances of academic dishonesty to the Academic Judiciary.
- Students will have 24 hours to completed each Quiz. Late Quizzes will not be accepted.
- Quiz question answers should integrate topics, concepts, and outcomes of the different papers covered for the section being tested.
Recording Your Oral Presentations Using Zoom: It is very straightforward to create a video of yourself giving a PPT presentation using Zoom:
- Download the Zoom app ( https://it.stonybrook.edu/services/zoom )
- Open the Zoom app
- Create a new Zoom meeting with only yourself (make sure audio and video are turned on)
- Share your screen
- Open your paper presentation in PPT and put in presentation mode
- Start recording and give a short test presentation to make sure that everything is working smoothly (use mouse as necessary to highlight specific regions of your slides)
- Stop recording and quit the meeting
- Open the newly created video (using QuickTime or some other video player) to make sure that your test presentation has both audio and video and looks good
- Follow the above steps to create your "full-length" video presentation (videos should not exceed 20-25 minutes)
- Email your video to ALL Instructors who will make it available to the class (please name your Zoom video Lastname_Paper1.mp4 or Lastname_Paper2.mp4 )
Oral Presentation Guidelines: Pre-recorded talks should be formal (as if at a scientific meeting or job talk), presented in PPT format, and be 25-30 minutes long. All talks will be posted on the course website. References should occur at the bottom of each slide when necessary. Presentations should be based mostly on the primary references however secondary references and other sources may be required to make some presentations complete. It is the responsibility of each presenter to email their talk by Friday at 5PM before the week in which their talk is being discussed. Talks will likely be arranged in the following order:
- Introduction/Background (include biological relevance if applicable)
- Specifics of the System or General Problem
- Computational Methods (theory) and Details (system setup) being used
- Results and Discussion (critical interpretation of results and any problems/challenges)
- Conclusions/Future
- Acknowledgments
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SECTION I: DRUG DISCOVERY AND BIOMOLECULAR STRUCTURE
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Rizzo, R. |
1. Jorgensen, W.L., The many roles of computation in drug discovery. Science 2004, 303, 1813-8 2. Kuntz, I. D., Structure-based strategies for drug design and discovery. Science 1992, 257, 1078-1082 |
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structures of the 20 amino acid side chains |
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SECTION II: MOLECULAR MODELING
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SECTION III: SAMPLING METHODS
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2. Karplus, M.; Petsko, G. A., Molecular dynamics simulations in biology. Nature 1990, 347, 631-9 |
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1. Metropolis Monte Carlo Simulation Tutorial, LearningFromTheWeb.net, Accessed Oct 2008, Luke, B. 2. Dill, K. A.; Chan, H. S., From Levinthal to pathways to funnels. Nat. Struct. Biol. 1997, 4, 10-19 |
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SECTION IV: LEAD DISCOVERY
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2. Huang, N.; et al., Benchmarking Sets for Molecular Docking. J. Med. Chem. 2006, 49(23), 6789-6801 |
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SECTION V: LEAD REFINEMENT
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2. Hou, T. J.; Xu, X. J.; ADME evaluation in drug discovery. J. Mol. Model, 2002, 8, 337-349 |
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No Final Exam in AMS-535/CHE-535 for Fall 2020 |