Computability and Complexity - 2019 entry
MODULE TITLE | Computability and Complexity | CREDIT VALUE | 15 |
---|---|---|---|
MODULE CODE | ECM3422 | MODULE CONVENER | Unknown |
DURATION: TERM | 1 | 2 | 3 |
---|---|---|---|
DURATION: WEEKS | 11 weeks | 0 | 0 |
Number of Students Taking Module (anticipated) | 13 |
---|
It is popularly supposed that there is no limit to the power of computers to perform any task, so long as it is sufficiently well defined, and to do so quickly and efficiently. In fact this is not so, and it can be proved mathematically that there are well-defined computational tasks which cannot, in principle, be performed by computers as we know them; and other tasks which, while they can be performed, cannot be completed in a feasible amount of time. This module will introduce you to the Turing Machine model of computation which underpins the fundamental theories of computability (concerned with what can be computed at all) and complexity (concerned with how efficiently things which can be computed can be computed). These theories will be introduced in a precise and formal way, and the main results and theorems will be stated and proven.
Pre-requisites: ECM1414, ECM2418
To introduce the Mathematical basis and practical implications of the classical theory of computability and complexity and to consider the extent to which this is still relevant to modern developments in computing.
On successful completion of this module, you should be able to:
Module Specific Skills and Knowledge:
1 explain what is meant by a general model of computation and work with some specific examples of such models;
2 describe the mathematical basis of the theory of computability and complexity;
3 appreciate the relationship between the theory of computation and complexity and practical computing.
Discipline Specific Skills and Knowledge:
4 appreciate the power of abstraction to support a general understanding of some subject matter;
5 appreciate the role of theoretical understanding in underpinning disciplined and responsible practice.
Personal and Key Transferable / Employment Skills and Knowledge:
6 approach problems analytically at an appropriate level of abstraction.
- Turing machines, and the universal Turing machine;
- recursive and recursively enumerable languages;
- undecidability of the halting problem for Turing machines; variants of the halting problem; other undecidable languages;
- the Church-Turing thesis;
- properties of languages and Rice’s theorem;
- time complexity;
- Complexity classes P and NP, and the P vs NP problem;
- NP-complete problems;
- Cook’s theorem;
- Space complexity classes and their relationships with the other complexity classes seen in the module.
Scheduled Learning & Teaching Activities | 46 | Guided Independent Study | 104 | Placement / Study Abroad |
---|
Category | Hours of study time | Description |
Scheduled learning and teaching | 22 | Lectures |
Scheduled learning and teaching | 24 | Tutorials |
Guided Independent Study | 24 | Coursework |
Guided Independent Study | 80 | Independent study |
Form of Assessment | Size of Assessment (e.g. duration/length) | ILOs Assessed | Feedback Method |
---|---|---|---|
Coursework | 20 | Written Exams | 80 | Practical Exams |
---|
Form of Assessment | % of Credit | Size of Assessment (e.g. duration/length) | ILOs Assessed | Feedback Method |
---|---|---|---|---|
Written exam – closed book | 80 | 2 hours - Summer Exam Period | 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 | None |
Coursework assignment | 20 | 20 hours | 1, 2, 4, 5, 6 | Written |
Original Form of Assessment | Form of Re-assessment | ILOs Re-assessed | Time Scale for Re-reassessment |
---|---|---|---|
All above | Written exam (100%) | All | August Ref/Def |
Referred and deferred assessment will normally be by examination. For referrals, only the examination will count, a mark of 40% being awarded if the examination is passed. For deferrals, candidates will be awarded the higher of the deferred examination mark or the deferred examination mark combined with the original coursework mark.
information that you are expected to consult. Further guidance will be provided by the Module Convener
ELE-https://vle.exeter.ac.uk
Reading list for this module:
Type | Author | Title | Edition | Publisher | Year | ISBN |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Set | Hopcroft, J. E.; Motwani, R. and Ullman, J. D. | Introduction to Automata Theory, Languages, and Computation | 3 | Addison-Wesley | 2007 | 978-0321476173 |
CREDIT VALUE | 15 | ECTS VALUE | 7.5 |
---|---|---|---|
PRE-REQUISITE MODULES | ECM1414, ECM2418 |
---|---|
CO-REQUISITE MODULES |
NQF LEVEL (FHEQ) | 3 (NQF level 6) | AVAILABLE AS DISTANCE LEARNING | No |
---|---|---|---|
ORIGIN DATE | Thursday 6th July 2017 | LAST REVISION DATE | Tuesday 16th July 2019 |
KEY WORDS SEARCH | Turing machine; computability; computational complexity. |
---|
Please note that all modules are subject to change, please get in touch if you have any questions about this module.