Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science

Computer Engineering

The concentration in computer engineering provides students with a solid base in the design, development and evaluation of computer systems. Thrust areas include computer architecture, software and embedded systems, but the program is highly customizable to the specific interests of the student. The research activities of the faculty in this concentration include parallel and distributed computer systems, distributed software architectures and databases, ultra-reliable real-time computer systems, VLSI architectures, reconfigurable computing, computer design automation, low-power design, embedded systems, computer communication protocols, computer networks, security, programming languages for parallel/distributed processing, knowledge management, service-oriented architectures and software engineering. 

Two plans are offered for the M.S. degree: a thesis option and a comprehensive examination option. For either option, students are required to develop a complete program of study with advice from their faculty advisor. The graduate advisor must approve the study plan. Part-time study toward the M.S. degree is available. The program of study must be completed within four calendar years from first enrollment.
 

Plan I: Thesis Option

  • The thesis option requires completion of:
    • 12 courses of study, four units (See M.S. plan of study for details)
    • An original research investigation
    • Completion of an M.S. thesis
    • Approval of the thesis by a thesis committee
  • The thesis committee is composed of three full-time faculty members with the faculty advisor of the student serving as the chair
  • Required undergraduate core courses and graduate seminar courses may not be counted toward the 12 courses:
    • EECS 290
    • EECS 292
    • EECS 293
    • EECS 294
    • EECS 295
  • Three core courses in the Computer Engineering concentration (CPE) must be completed with a B (3.0) letter grade or better
  • At least four additional concentration or approved courses must also be completed with a B (3.0) letter grade or better
  • No more than four units of EECS299 and one undergraduate elective course may be counted toward the 12 courses
  • Up to four (16 units - 4 units each) of the required 12 courses may be from EECS296 (M.S. thesis research) with the approval of the student's thesis advisor
  • No more than one undergraduate elective course may be counted


Plan II: Comprehensive Examination Option

  • The comprehensive examination option requires the completion of 12 courses, four units (See M.S. plan of study for details)
  • Three core courses in the Computer Engineering concentration (CPE) must be completed with a B (3.0) lettter grade or better
  • At least five additional concentration courses must also be completed with a B (3.0) letter grade or better
  • Only one EECS 299 course can be counted toward elective course requirments, if the EECS 299 course is four or more units
  • Undergraduate core courses and graduate seminar courses may not be counted toward the 12 courses requirements: 
    • EECS 290
    • EECS 292
    • EECS 293
    • EECS 294
    • EECS 295
  • In fulfillment of the comprehensive examination seminar element of the M.S. degree program, students are required to enroll and complete EECS 294 in one quarter.
  • No more than two undergraduate elective courses may be counted.
  • Additional concentration-specific requirements are as follows; a list of core and concentration courses is given at the end of this section.

M.S. Plan of Study

 

List of CPE Concentration Courses

  • EECS 211*
  • EECS 213*
  • EECS 215*
  • EECS 217
  • EECS 220
  • EECS 221
  • EECS 222
  • EECS 223
  • EECS 224
  • EECS 225
  • EECS 226
  • EECS 227
  • EECS 229
  • EECS 230
  • EECS 231
  • EECS 232
  • EECS 247
  • EECS 248A
  • EECS 298
  • Computer Science 233
  • Computer Science 234
  • Computer Science 236

Courses denoted with * are also core courses

Course denoted ** requires student to submit a Genreal Petition to count this course as a concentration.

In addition to fulfilling the course requirements outlined above, it is a university requirement for the master of science degree that students fulfill a minimum of 12 courses of study.