4.3 KiB
Welcome to CS 763!
!!! attention * Due to COVID-19, CS 763 will be conducted virtually. * All times are Madison local time.
This is a graduate-level course covering advanced topics in security and privacy in data science. The field is eclectic, and so is this course. We will start with three core areas: differential privacy, adversarial machine learning, and applied cryptography in machine learning. Then, we will cover two advanced topic areas; this year, algorithmic fairness and formal verification for data science. This is a project based course: in small groups, students will be expected to complete a final project on a technical topic related to the course.
Besides covering technical material, this course will emphasize research skills: reading research papers, presenting technical material, and writing summaries and reviews.
Logistics
- Course: CS 763, Fall 2020
- Time: Monday, Wednesday, Friday, 2:30-3:45
- Location: BB Collaborate Ultra (BBCU)
For the first ten weeks, lectures will be held on Monday, Wednesday, and Friday. In the remaining five weeks, you will work on your course projects. Though there are no lectures scheduled in this period, I will be available to meet as needed.
We will be using Piazza to discuss papers, ask questions, and find group members:
You can also contact me directly. To ensure that your email goes to the right place, please start the subject with CS763.
Course Staff
- Instructor: Justin Hsu
- Email: mailto:justhsu@cs.wisc.edu
- Office hours: By appointment
Grading
Grades will be posted on Canvas.
-
Presentation and summary
- Paper presentation: 15%
- Presentation summary: 15%
-
OR: Paper reviews (remote only)
- 16 reviews: 30%
-
Course project
- Milestone 1: 10%
- Milestone 2: 10%
- Final project: 50%
Everything except the final project will be graded on a simple scale: no submission (0), below expectations (1), meets expectations (2). Assignments that significantly exceed expectations can receive additional (bonus) points. The final project will be graded on a 10-point scale.
Paper presentations
In groups of two you will lead one lecture, presenting a few related papers and guiding the discussion; details here.
Presentation reports
In groups of two you will write up a detailed summary of another group's presentation; details here.
Course Project
The main course component is the course project. You will work individually or in pairs on a topic of your choice, producing a conference-style write-up and presenting the project at the end of the semester. The best projects may eventually lead to a research paper or survey. Details can be found here.
Accommodations for Remote Students
To provide opportunities for live discussion, lectures will be held synchronously. To accommodate students attending from other time zones, all lectures will be recorded and uploaded to BBCU (this may take a few hours). Students who are not able to attend synchronously will not be able to present a paper and write a presentation summary. Instead, these students will complete paper reviews asynchronously, through HotCRP:
!!! attention If you are not able to regularly attend live lectures in your time zone, you must let me know during the first week of the course so I can set up your account.
Academic Honesty
Writing is a central part of this course. All students are expected to follow academic honesty standards. In brief: all the text that you submit must be in your own words, and you are not allowed to copy anything---from a paper, from the internet, from someone else---without full attribution.
If you are completing paper reviews, you should not search for reviews that may be online---this is expressly against the course policies. You should complete the review as if you were seeing the paper for the first time. Just like conference reviewing, all paper reviews are to be done by yourself: you should not talk to anyone about the paper until after you have submitted it.