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4-1 Data Science Syllabus

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
71 views7 pages

4-1 Data Science Syllabus

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edigadinesh2002
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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JNTUA B.Tech. R20 Regulations

JAWAHARLAL NEHRU TECHNOLOGICAL UNIVERSITY ANANTAPUR


B.TechCSE(DS)– IV-I Sem L T P C
3 0 0 3
(20A05705a) CYBER SECURITY
Common to IT, CSE(DS), CSE(IOT)
(Professional Elective course - III)

Course Objectives:
The course is designed to provide awareness on different cyber crimes, cyber offenses, tools and methods
used in cyber crime.
Course Outcomes:
After completion of the course, students will be able to
 Classify the cyber crimes and understand the Indian ITA 2000
 Analyse the vulnerabilities in any computing system and find the solutions
 Predict the security threats of the future
 Investigate the protection mechanisms
 Design security solutions for organizations

UNIT I Introduction to Cybercrime Lecture 8Hrs


Introduction, Cybercrime, and Information Security, Who are Cybercriminals, Classifications of
Cybercrimes, And Cybercrime: The legal Perspectives and Indian Perspective, Cybercrime and the Indian
ITA 2000, A Global Perspective on Cybercrimes.
UNIT II Cyber Offenses: How Criminals Plan Them Lecture 9Hrs
Introduction, How Criminals plan the Attacks, Social Engineering, Cyber stalking, Cyber cafe and
Cybercrimes, Botnets: The Fuel for Cybercrime, Attack Vector, Cloud Computing
UNIT III Cybercrime: Mobile and Wireless Devices Lecture 9Hrs
Introduction, Proliferation of Mobile and Wireless Devices, Trends in Mobility, Credit card Frauds in
Mobile and Wireless Computing Era, Security Challenges Posed by Mobile Devices, Registry Settings for
Mobile Devices, Authentication service Security, Attacks on Mobile/Cell Phones, Mobile Devices:
Security Implications for Organizations, Organizational Measures for Handling Mobile, Organizational
Security Policies an Measures in Mobile Computing Era, Laptops.
UNIT IV Tools and Methods Used in Cybercrime Lecture 8Hrs
Introduction, Proxy Servers and Anonymizers, Phishing, Password Cracking, Keyloggers and Spywares,
Virus and Worms, Trojan Horse and Backdoors, Steganography, DoS and DDoS attacks, SQL Injection,
Buffer Overflow.
UNIT V Cyber Security: Organizational Implications Lecture 8Hrs
Introduction, Cost of Cybercrimes and IPR issues, Web threats for Organizations, Security and Privacy
Implications, Social media marketing: Security Risks and Perils for Organizations, Social Computing and
the associated challenges for Organizations.
Textbooks:
1. Cyber Security: Understanding Cyber Crimes, Computer Forensics and Legal Perspectives, Nina
Godbole and Sunil Belapure, Wiley INDIA.
Reference Books:
1. Cyber Security Essentials, James Graham, Richard Howard and Ryan Otson, CRC Press.
2. Introduction to Cyber Security ,Chwan-Hwa(john) Wu,J.DavidIrwin.CRC Press T&F Group
Online Learning Resources:
http://nptel.ac.in/courses/106105031/40
http://nptel.ac.in/courses/106105031/39
http://nptel.ac.in/courses/106105031/38

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JNTUA B.Tech. R20 Regulations

JAWAHARLAL NEHRU TECHNOLOGICAL UNIVERSITY ANANTAPUR


B.Tech (CSE)– IV-I Sem L T P C
3 0 0 3
(20A05702c) NATURAL LANGUAGE PROCESSING
(Professional Elective Course– IV)
Course Objectives:
• Explain and apply fundamental algorithms and techniques in the area of natural language
processing (NLP)
• Discuss approaches to syntax and semantics in NLP.
• Examine current methods for statistical approaches to machine translation.
• Teach machine learning techniques used in NLP.

Course Outcomes:
After completion of the course, students will be able to
• Understand the various NLP Applications and Organization of Natural language, able to learn
and implement realistic applications using Python.
• Apply the various Parsing techniques, Bayes Rule, Shannon game, Entropy and Cross
Entropy.
• Understand the fundamentals of CFG and parsers and mechanisms in ATN’s.
• Apply Semantic Interpretation and Language Modelling.
• Apply the concept of Machine Translation and multilingual Information Retrieval systems
and Automatic Summarization.

UNIT I Introduction to Natural language Lecture 8Hrs


The Study of Language, Applications of NLP, Evaluating Language Understanding Systems,
Different Levels of Language Analysis, Representations and Understanding, Organization of
Natural language Understanding Systems, Linguistic Background: An outline of English Syntax.

UNIT II Grammars and Parsing Lecture 9Hrs


Grammars and Parsing- Top-Down and Bottom-Up Parsers, Transition Network Grammars,
Feature Systems and Augmented Grammars, Morphological Analysis and the Lexicon, Parsing with
Features, Augmented Transition Networks, Bayees Rule, Shannon game, Entropy and Cross Entropy.

UNIT III Grammars for Natural Language Lecture 8Hrs


Grammars for Natural Language, Movement Phenomenon in Language, Handling questions in
Context Free Grammars, Hold Mechanisms in ATNs, Gap Threading, Human Preferences in Parsing,
Shift Reduce Parsers, Deterministic Parsers.

UNIT IV Lecture 8Hrs


Semantic Interpretation
Semantic & Logical form, Word senses & ambiguity, The basic logical form language, Encoding
ambiguity in the logical Form, Verbs & States in logical form, Thematic roles, Speech acts
&embedded sentences, Defining semantics structure model theory.
Language Modelling
Introduction, n-Gram Models, Language model Evaluation, Parameter Estimation, Language
Model Adaption, Types of Language Models, Language-Specific Modelling Problems,
Multilingual and Cross lingual Language Modelling.

UNIT V Lecture9 Hrs


Machine Translation
Survey: Introduction, Problems of Machine Translation, Is Machine Translation Possible, Brief
History, Possible Approaches, Current Status. Anusaraka or Language Accessor: Background, Cutting
the Gordian Knot, The Problem, Structure of Anusaraka System, User Interface, Linguistic Area,
Giving up Agreement in Anusarsaka Output, Language Bridges.

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JNTUA B.Tech. R20 Regulations

JAWAHARLAL NEHRU TECHNOLOGICAL UNIVERSITY ANANTAPUR


B.TechCSE(DS)– IV-I Sem L T P C
3 0 0 3
(20A05703c) DEEP LEARNING
(Professional Elective Course– V)

Course Objectives:
 Demonstrate the major technology trends driving Deep Learning
 Build, train, and apply fully connected deep neural networks
 Implement efficient (vectorized) neural networks
 Analyse the key parameters and hyper parameters in a neural network's architecture
Course Outcomes:
After completion of the course, students will be able to
 Demonstrate the mathematical foundation of neural network
 Describe the machine learning basics
 Differentiate architecture of deep neural network
 Build a convolutional neural network
 Build and train RNN and LSTMs
UNIT I Lecture 8Hrs
Linear Algebra: Scalars, Vectors, Matrices and Tensors, Matrix operations, types of matrices, Norms,
Eigen decomposition, Singular Value Decomposition, Principal Components Analysis.
Probability and Information Theory: Random Variables, Probability Distributions,
MarginalProbability, Conditional Probability, Expectation, Variance and Covariance, Bayes’ Rule,
Information Theory. Numerical Computation: Overflow and Underflow, Gradient-Based Optimization,
Constrained Optimization, Linear Least Squares.

UNIT II Lecture 9Hrs


Machine Learning: Basics and Under fitting, Hyper parameters and Validation Sets, Estimators, Bias
and Variance, Maximum Likelihood, Bayesian Statistics, Supervised and Unsupervised Learning,
Stochastic Gradient Descent, Challenges Motivating Deep Learning. Deep Feed forward Networks:
Learning XOR, Gradient-Based Learning, Hidden Units, Architecture Design, Back-Propagation and
other Differentiation Algorithms.

UNIT III Lecture 8Hrs


Regularization for Deep Learning: Parameter Norm Penalties, Norm Penalties as Constrained
Optimization, Regularization and Under-Constrained Problems, Dataset Augmentation, Noise
Robustness, Semi-Supervised Learning, Multi-Task Learning, Early Stopping, Parameter Tying and
Parameter Sharing, Sparse Representations, Bagging and Other Ensemble Methods, Dropout,
Adversarial Training, Tangent Distance, Tangent Prop and Manifold Tangent Classifier. Optimization
for Training Deep Models: Pure Optimization, Challenges in Neural Network Optimization, Basic
Algorithms, Parameter Initialization Strategies, Algorithms with Adaptive Learning Rates,
Approximate Second-Order Methods, Optimization Strategies and Meta-Algorithms.

UNIT IV Lecture 9Hrs


Convolutional Networks: The Convolution Operation, Pooling, Convolution, Basic Convolution
Functions, Structured Outputs, Data Types, Efficient Convolution Algorithms, Random or
Unsupervised Features, Basis for Convolutional Networks.
Lecture 8Hrs
UNIT V
Sequence Modeling: Recurrent and Recursive Nets: Unfolding Computational Graphs, Recurrent
Neural Networks, Bidirectional RNNs, Encoder-Decoder Sequence-to-Sequence Architectures, Deep
Recurrent Networks, Recursive Neural Networks, Echo State Networks, LSTM, Gated RNNs,
Optimization for Long-Term Dependencies, Auto encoders, Deep Generative Models.

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JNTUA B.Tech. R20 Regulations

JAWAHARLAL NEHRU TECHNOLOGICAL UNIVERSITY ANANTAPUR


B.Tech CSE (DS)– IV-I Sem L T P C
3 0 0 3
(20A52701b) MANAGEMENT SCIENCE
(HUMANITIES ELECTIVE-II)

Course Objectives:
 To provide fundamental knowledge on Management, Administration, Organization & its
concepts.
 To make the students understand the role of management in Production
 To impart the concept of HRM in order to have an idea on Recruitment, Selection,Training&
Development, job evaluation and Merit rating concepts
 To create awareness on identify Strategic Management areas & the PERT/CPM for better
Project Management
 To make the students aware of the contemporary issues in management
Course Outcomes:
 Understand the concepts & principles of management and designs of organization in a
practical world
 Apply the knowledge of Work-study principles & Quality Control techniques in industry
 Analyze the concepts of HRM in Recruitment, Selection and Training & Development.
 Evaluate PERT/CPM Techniques for projects of an enterprise and estimate time & cost of
project & to analyze the business through SWOT.
 Create Modern technology in management science.

UNITI INTRODUCTION TO MANAGEMENT


Management - Concept and meaning - Nature-Functions - Management as a Science and Art and
both. Schools of Management Thought - Taylor’s Scientific Theory-Henry Fayol’s principles - Eltan
Mayo’s Human relations - Systems Theory - Organisational Designs - Line organization - Line &
Staff Organization - Functional Organization - Matrix Organization - Project Organization -
Committee form of Organization - Social responsibilities of Management.

UNIT II OPERATIONS MANAGEMENT


Principles and Types of Plant Layout - Methods of Production (Job, batch and Mass Production),
Work Study - Statistical Quality Control- Deming‘s contribution to Quality. Material Management -
Objectives - Inventory-Functions - Types, Inventory Techniques - EOQ-ABC Analysis - Purchase
Procedure and Stores Management - Marketing Management - Concept - Meaning - Nature-
Functions of Marketing - Marketing Mix - Channels of Distribution - Advertisement and Sales
Promotion - Marketing Strategies based on Product Life Cycle.

UNIT III HUMAN RESOURCES MANAGEMENT (HRM)


HRM - Definition and Meaning – Nature - Managerial and Operative functions - Evolution of HRM -
Job Analysis - Human Resource Planning(HRP) - Employee Recruitment-Sources of Recruitment -
Employee Selection - Process and Tests in Employee Selection - Employee Training and
Development - On-the- job & Off-the-job training methods - Performance Appraisal Concept -
Methods of Performance Appraisal – Placement - Employee Induction - Wage and Salary
Administration

UNIT IV STRATEGIC & PROJECT MANAGEMENT


Definition& Meaning - Setting of Vision - Mission - Goals - Corporate Planning Process -
Environmental Scanning - Steps in Strategy Formulation and Implementation - SWOT Analysis -
Project Management - Network Analysis - Programme Evaluation and Review Technique (PERT) -
Critical Path Method (CPM) Identifying Critical Path - Probability of Completing the project within
given time - Project Cost- Analysis - Project Crashing (Simple problems).

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JNTUA B.Tech. R20 Regulations

JAWAHARLAL NEHRU TECHNOLOGICAL UNIVERSITY ANANTAPUR


B.Tech CSE(DS)– IV-I Sem L T P C
1 0 2 2

(20A32703) NO SQL USING MONGO DB


Skill Oriented Course - V
Pre-requisite DBMS, Basic knowledge of DataScience

Course Objectives:
 This course elucidates concepts related to Mongodb.
 The students will get hands- on experience in working with NoSQL and Mongodb.
Course Outcomes (CO):
After completion of the course, students will be able to
 Understand the working of NoSQL, Mongodb, its features
 Explain and compare different types of Data
 Demonstrate the detailed architecture and performance tune of Document-oriented databases.
 Explain performance tune of Key-Value Pair NoSQL databases.
 Apply NoSQL development tools on MongoDB
UNIT - I
Introduction, Getting Started- Documents, Collections, Databases, Getting and Starting MongoDB,
Introduction to MongoDB Shell, Data Types, Using the MongoDB Shell
Creating, Updating, and Deleting Documents: Inserting and Saving Documents, Updating Documents,
Setting a write concern
UNIT - II
Indexing: Introduction to Indexing, Using explain () and hint(), When Not to use Index,Types of
Indexes, Index Administration
Special Index and Collection Types: Capped Collections, Time-To-Live Indexes, Full-Text Indexes,
Geospatial Indexing, Storing Files with GridFS
UNIT - III
Aggregation: The Aggregation Framework, Pipeline Operations, MapReduce, Aggregation
Commands
Application Design: Normalization versus Denormalization, Optimizations for Data Manipulation,
Planning Out Databases and Collections, Managing Consistency, Migrating, Schemas, When Not to
use MongoDB
Setting Up a Replica Set: Introduction to Replication, A One-minute Test Setup, configuring a
ReplicaSet, changing your ReplicaSet Configuration, How to design a Set, Member Configuration
Options
UNIT - IV
Administration: Starting Members in Standalone Mode, Replica Set Configuration, Manipulating
Member State, Monitoring Replication, Master-Slave
Sharding Administration: Seeing the Current State, Tracking Network Connections, Server
Administration, Balancing Data
Data Administration: Setting Up Authentication, Creating and Deleting Indexes, Preheating Data,
Compacting Data, Moving Collections, Pre-allocating Data Files
UNIT - V
Starting and Stopping MongoDB: Starting from the Command Line, Stopping MongoDB, Security,
Logging
Monitoring MongoDB: Monitoring Memory Usage, Calculating the Working Set, Tracking
Performance, Monitoring Replication
Making Backups: Backing Up a server, Backing Up a ReplicaSet, Backing Up a Sharded Cluster,
Cresting Incremental Backups with mongoopolog
Designing the System, Virtualization, Configuring System Settings, Configuring your network,
System Housekeeping

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JNTUA B.Tech. R20 Regulations

JAWAHARLAL NEHRU TECHNOLOGICAL UNIVERSITY ANANTAPUR


B.Tech L T P C
3 0 0 3
(20A04506) PRINCIPLES OF COMMUNICATION SYSTEMS
Course Objectives:
 To understand the concept of various modulation schemes and multiplexing.
 To apply the concept of various modulation schemes to solve engineering problems.
 To analyse various modulation schemes.
 To evaluate various modulation scheme in real time applications.
Course Outcomes:
 Understand the concept of various modulation schemes and multiplexing
 Apply the concept of various modulation schemes to solve engineering problems
 Analyse various modulation schemes, and evaluate various modulation scheme in real
time applications

UNIT I Amplitude Modulation


Introduction to Noise and Fourier Transform. An overview of Electronic Communication Systems.
Need for Frequency Translation, Amplitude Modulation: DSB-FC, DSB-SC, SSB-SC and VSB.
Frequency Division Multiplexing. Radio Transmitter and Receiver.

UNIT II Angle Modulation


Angle Modulation, Tone modulated FM Signal, Arbitrary Modulated FM Signal, FM Modulation and
Demodulation. Stereophonic FM Broadcasting.

UNIT III Pulse Modulation


Sampling Theorem: Low pass and Band pass Signals. Pulse Amplitude Modulation and Concept of
Time Division Multiplexing. Pulse Width Modulation. Digital Representation of Analog Signals.

UNIT IV Digital Modulation


Binary Amplitude Shift Keying, Binary Phase Shift Keying and Quadrature Phase Shift Keying,
Binary Frequency Shift Keying. Regenerative Repeater.

UNIT VCommunication Systems


Satellite, RADAR, Optical, Mobile and Computer Communication (Block diagram approach only).

Note: The main emphasis is on qualitative treatment. Complex mathematical treatment may be
avoided.

Textbooks:
1. Herbert Taub, Donald L Schilling and Goutam Saha, “Principles of Communication
Systems”, 3rdEdition, Tata McGraw-Hill Publishing Company Ltd., 2008.

References:
1. B. P. Lathi, Zhi Ding and Hari M. Gupta, “Modern Digital and Analog Communication
Systems”, 4th Edition, Oxford University Press, 2017.
2. K. Sam Shanmugam “Digital and Analog Communication Systems”, Wiley India Edition,
2008.

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JNTUA B.Tech. R20 Regulations

JAWAHARLAL NEHRU TECHNOLOGICAL UNIVERSITY ANANTAPUR


B.Tech IV- I Sem L T P C
3 0 0 3
(20A04706) PRINCIPLES OF CELLULAR AND MOBILE COMMUNICATIONS
Course Objectives:
 To understand the concepts and operation of cellular systems.
 To apply the concepts of cellular systems to solve engineering problems.
 To analyse cellular systems for meaningful conclusions.
 To evaluate suitability of a cellular system in real time applications.
 To design cellular patterns based on frequency reuse factor.

Course Outcomes:
At the end of the course, the student should be able to
 Understand the concepts and operation of cellular systems (L1)
 Apply the concepts of cellular systems to solve engineering problems (L2).
 Analyse cellular systems for meaningful conclusions, Evaluate suitability of a cellular system
in real time applications (L3).
 Design cellular patterns based on frequency reuse factor (L4).

UNIT I Introduction to Cellular Mobile Systems


Why cellular mobile communication systems? A basic cellular system, Evolution of mobile radio
communications, Performance criteria, Characteristics of mobile radio environment, Operation of
cellular systems. Examples for analog and digital cellular systems.

UNIT II Cellular Radio System Design


General description of the problem, Concept of frequency reuse channels, Cochannel interference
reduction, Desired C/I ratio, Cell splitting and sectoring.

UNIT III Handoffs and Dropped Calls


Why handoffs and types of handoffs, Initiation of handoff, Delaying a handoff, Forced handoffs,
Queuing of handoffs, Power-difference handoffs, Mobile assisted handoff and soft handoff, Cell-site
handoff, Intersystem handoff. Introduction to dropped call rate.

UNIT IV Multiple Access Techniques for Wireless Communications


Introduction, Frequency Division Multiple Access, Time Division Multiple Access, Code Division
Multiple Access and Space Division Multiple Access.

UNIT V Digital Cellular Systems


Global System for Mobile Systems, Time Division Multiple Access Systems, Code Division Multiple
Access Systems. Examples for 2G, 3G and 4G systems. Introduction to 5G system.

Textbooks:
1. William C. Y. Lee, “Mobile Cellular Telecommunications”, 2ndEdition, McGraw-Hill
International, 1995.
2. Theodore S. Rappaport, “Wireless Communications – Principles and Practice”, 2ndEdition,
PHI, 2004.

References:
1. Aditya K. Jagannatham “Principles of Modern Wireless Communications Systems – Theory
and Practice”, McGraw-Hill International, 2015.

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