Class Central is learner-supported. When you buy through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission.

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Introduction to EECS II: Digital Communication Systems

Massachusetts Institute of Technology via MIT OpenCourseWare

Overview

An introduction to several fundamental ideas in electrical engineering and computer science, using digital communication systems as the vehicle. The three parts of the course—bits, signals, and packets—cover three corresponding layers of abstraction that form the basis of communication systems like the Internet. The course teaches ideas that are useful in other parts of EECS: abstraction, probabilistic analysis, superposition, time and frequency-domain representations, system design principles and trade-offs, and centralized and distributed algorithms. The course emphasizes connections between theoretical concepts and practice using programming tasks and some experiments with real-world communication channels.

Syllabus

1. Overview: information and entropy.
2. Compression: Huffman and LZW.
3. Errors, channel codes.
4. Linear block codes, parity relations.
5. Error correction, syndrome decoding.
6. Convolutional codes.
7. Viterbi decoding.
8. Noise.
9. Transmitting on a physical channel.
10. Linear time-invariant (LTI) systems.
11. LTI channel and intersymbol interference.
12. Filters and composition.
13. Frequency response of LTI systems.
14. Spectral representation of signals.
15. Modulation/demodulation.
16. More on modulation/demodulation.
17. Packet switching.
18. MAC protocols.
19. Network routing (without failures).
20. Network routing (with failures).
21. Reliable transport.
22. Sliding window analysis, Little's law.
23. A brief history of the Internet.
24. History of the Internet cont'd, course summary.

Taught by

Prof. Hari Balakrishnan and Prof. George Verghese

Reviews

5.0 rating, based on 3 Class Central reviews

Start your review of Introduction to EECS II: Digital Communication Systems

  • I watched all the classes, and learned a lot of new things, which I didn't get at the university during graduation
  • Shahid Ahmed Khaskheli
    Over all course material and presentation is very informative and will definitely enhance the skills in Digital Communication
  • Gourab Kumar Shee
    Excellent course, the pipeline they propose to help you understand text mining is quite helpful. It has an important introduction to the most key concepts and techniques for text mining and analytics.

Never Stop Learning.

Get personalized course recommendations, track subjects and courses with reminders, and more.

Someone learning on their laptop while sitting on the floor.