Graduate Computer Science
Use this Library Research Guide to find resources on computer science scholarly articles, books, websites, and more.
Computer Science
The following online resources have been compiled by a librarian and may be useful in your research; however, don't forget to always evaluate any websites you use!
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AlanTuring.net This link opens in a new windowThis is the largest collection of digital facsimiles of original documents by Turing and other pioneers of computing. In addition, there are articles about Turing and his work, including his work on artificial intelligence.
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Charles Babbage Institute (CBI) This link opens in a new windowIts mission is to facilitate, foster, and conduct research to advance understanding of computing, information, and culture. Explore some of their research, news, and archive collections.
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CodeAcademy This link opens in a new windowCodeAcademy is an interactive platform that offers free coding classes in several programming languages.
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Computer Desktop Encyclopedia This link opens in a new windowThis is an open-access encyclopedia containing more than 40,000 entries related to computer science.
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Computing Research Repository (CoRR) - arXiv. This link opens in a new windowarXiv is a free distribution service and an open-access archive for nearly 2.4 million scholarly articles in the fields of physics, mathematics, computer science, quantitative biology, quantitative finance, statistics, electrical engineering and systems science, and economics.
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Science.gov This link opens in a new windowScience.gov provides access to millions of authoritative scientific research results from U.S. federal agencies.
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TED Talks - Computers This link opens in a new windowThis is a collection of TED Talks (and more) on the topic of computers.
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UC Irvine Machine Learning Repository This link opens in a new windowThey currently maintain 677 data sets as a service to the machine learning community. You can donate and find data sets used by millions of people worldwide!
Find More with a Google Search
It's true that you can find some high-quality, trustworthy websites to use in your research. If you're going to use websites, make sure to evaluate your sources thoroughly. Check out our Google Like a Librarian guide for search tips or ask the library (ask@snhu.libanswers.com) if you need more help.