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Archived Courses
Spring 2012
Cognitive Psychology
PSYC 2100: Introduction to Learning and Behavior
Credits: 3
Prerequisites: None
Enrollment Restrictions: None
Description of course contents:
The course will examine historical and current theories that explain
how different types of learning provide the foundation for most, if not
all, forms of an organism's behavior. We will cover these theories by
carefully examining the most important research experiments that
contributed to our current understanding of the principles and concepts
that shape our behavior. The lecture content will focus heavily on
experimental findings derived from research of learning processes in
human and non-human species. The concept of Learning will be explored
from the perspective of theories of Classical Conditioning, Operant
Conditioning, and more recent theories of the organization of behavior
derived from human studies.
Instructor: Williams
PSYC 2150: Introduction to Cognition
Credits: 3
Prerequisites: None
Enrollment Restrictions: None
Description of course contents:
Cognition is the activity of knowing: the acquisition, organization,
and use of knowledge. Emphasizing fundamental issues, this course
introduces such basic content areas in cognitive psychology as
perception, attention, memory, and language.
Instructor: Jaswal
PSYC 3005: Research Methods & Data Analysis I
*Note:
Students with strong math or statistics backgrounds should consider
taking PSYC 4005 as a substitute for PSYC 3005.
Credits: 4 (Required lab)
Prerequisite:
PSYC 1010 and any 2000-level PSYC course and one of the following math
courses with a grade of C- or higher: MATH 1210 (Applied Calculus I),
MATH 1220 (Applied Calculus II), MATH 1310 (Calculus I), MATH 1320
(Calculus II), APMA 1090 (Single Variable Calculus I), or APMA 1110
(Single Variable Calculus II). Students with transfer credit or AP
credit in one of these courses (e.g., AP Calculus AB, or AP Calculus
BC) are exempt from the requirement.
Enrollment restrictions:
To be officially enrolled in PSYC 3005, registration is required for
BOTH the lecture and a lab section. Otherwise, you will be dropped from
the class. Instructions on how to add the lecture or lab section or
how to change lab sections will be given during the first lecture.
Description of course contents:
Introduction to research methods in psychology, integrating statistical
analysis. Emphasis on descriptive statistics and non-experimental
research methods. Use of computers for data analysis, experimentation,
and report writing. This course is the first part of a two-part series
(PSYC 3005 and PSYC 3006).
Instructor: Morris
PSYC 3006: Research Methods & Data Analysis II
Credits: 4 (Required lab)
Prerequisite: PSYC 3005 (with C or better)
Enrollment Restrictions: Psychology Majors/Minors, CogSci Majors
To be officially enrolled in PSYC 3005, registration is required for
BOTH the lecture and a lab section. Otherwise, you will be dropped from
the class. Instructions on how to add the lecture or lab section or
how to change lab sections will be given during the first lecture.
Description of course contents: Second part of
a two-part series. Emphasis on inferential statistics (t-tests and
ANOVA) and issues in experimentation.
*Note: This course may satisfy the College’s Second Writing requirement.
Instructor: Freeman
PSYC 3006: Research Methods & Data Analysis II
Credits: 4 (Required lab)
Prerequisite: PSYC 3005 (with C or better)
Enrollment Restrictions: Psychology Majors/Minors, CogSci Majors
To be officially enrolled in PSYC 3005, registration is required for
BOTH the lecture and a lab section. Otherwise, you will be dropped from
the class. Instructions on how to add the lecture or lab section or
how to change lab sections will be given during the first lecture.
Description of course contents: Second part of a two-part series. Emphasis on inferential statistics (t-tests and ANOVA) and issues in experimentation.
*Note: This course may satisfy the College’s Second Writing requirement.Instructor: Schmidt
PSYC 3490: Development in Infancy
Credits: 3
Prerequisites: None
Enrollment Restrictions: Psychology Majors/Minors, Cognitive Science Majors.
Description of course contents: Development during infancy is rapid and
fascinating. Changes come in how babies see, hear, move, and think. Social
influences in family, community, and culture shape the infant's
development. We will go over all of these in detail with lectures,
class discussions, films, and reading assignments.
Instructor: Keen
PSYC 4005: Advanced Research Methods & Data Analysis I
*Note: This class is a substitute for PSYC 3005.
Credits: 4 (Required lab)
Prerequisite:
PSYC 1010 and any 2000-level PSYC course and one of the following math
courses with a grade of C- or higher: MATH 1210 (Applied Calculus I),
MATH 1220 (Applied Calculus II), MATH 1310 (Calculus I), MATH 1320
(Calculus II), APMA 1090 (Single Variable Calculus I), or APMA 1110
(Single Variable Calculus II). Students with transfer credit or AP
credit in one of these courses (e.g., AP Calculus AB, or AP Calculus
BC) are exempt from the requirement.
Enrollment restrictions:
To be officially enrolled in PSYC 4005, registration is required for
BOTH the lecture and a lab section. Otherwise, you will be dropped from
the class. Instructions on how to add the lecture or lab section or
how to change lab sections will be given during the first lecture.
Description of course contents: This course is the first of a two-course series
which students intending to continue to graduate school after their Bachelors
degrees may take to replace Research Methods and Data Analysis I. In
this series, we start by laying out foundational mathematical concepts
that are common to all or most quantitative methods in Psychology. In
the second course of this series, this foundation will be used to
introduce specific data analysis techniques as special cases and to
introduce some research methods. The topics for this course encompass
probability theory, information theory, linear algebra, test theory,
and an introduction to modeling.
Instructor: Von Oertzen
PSYC 4110: Psycholinguistics
*Note: PSYC 4110 may be used to fulfill either the Cognitive Psychology or the Linguistics area requirement, but not both.
Credits: 3
Prerequisites: None
Enrollment Restrictions: 4th years: Psychology Majors/Minors, Cognitive Science Majors, Linguistics and Communication Disorders Majors/Minors.
Description of course contents:
This course will discuss how linguistic models help us to understand
the psychology of language. We will focus on the emergence of language
in children, acquisition and development of language, language
disorders and neurolinguistics, sociolinguistics, and bilingualism.
Instructor: Loncke
PSYC 4111: Language Development and Disorders
*Note:
PSYC 4110 may be used to fulfill either the Cognitive Psychology or
the Linguistics area requirement, but not both. Either PSYC 4111:
Language Development and Disorders (Bonvillian) or PSYC 5310:
Developmental Psycholinguistics (Bonvillian) may be taken for credit,
but not both.
Credits: 3
Prerequisites: None
Enrollment Restrictions: 4th years: Psychology Majors/Minors, Cognitive Science Majors, and Linguistics Majors/Minors.
Description of course contents:
This course will focus on language and cognitive development in persons
with disabilities. Among the populations examined will be children with
autistic disorder, children with Williams syndrome, deaf children,
developmentally dysphasic children, adults with aphasia, and children
with severe mental retardation. In addition to spoken language
development, the course will examine the acquisition of sign
communication skills.
Instructor: Bonvillian
PSYC 4120: Psychology of Reading
Credits: 3
Prerequisite: PSYC 3005 or Instructor Permission
Enrollment Restrictions: 4th years: Psychology Majors/Minors, Cognitive Science Majors, and Linguistics Majors/Minors.
Description of course contents: For psychologists who
study the psychology of reading, it sometimes amazes us that most
literate people do not think much about
the reading process. If you ask the typical person about how reading
works, a
typical response is that …it just does. I look at words on a page and
then the
sounds come out of my mouth. You might also hear… I do not know how I
do it,
but for as long as I can remember I could do it. Under certain
circumstances, however, a deeper level of evaluation is forthcoming and
people report that it is a very complicated process. Listening to
someone who has some type of reading impairment, observing young
children as they are learning to read, wondering about the meaning of a
passage (Did the main character insult a minor character or was it the
other way around?), debating the pronunciation of a word (greasy,
Roanoke, Staunton, theater, insurance), or reading a passage in a
second language, readers make evaluations/decisions during the reading
process. The focus of this class, Psychology of Reading, is the study
of the reading process; what happens when we process the squiggles on
the page to meaningful information that we can use. This includes word
processing, sentence processing, speed-reading, text comprehension,
etc. All of this is related to how the brain works and how we think. We
will read basic/historical information from texts, review recent
psychological research articles, and consider some hands-on experiences
related to the reading process. The Psychology of Reading course is an
interesting mix of experimental & cognitive psychology and
structural linguistics, as well as psychoneurology, phonetics,
anthropology, sociology, education, and so on.
Instructor: Adams
PSYC 4559-2: The New Science of the Unconscious
Credits: 3
Prerequisites: None
Enrollment Restrictions: 4th years: Psychology Majors/Minors and Cognitive Science Majors
Description of course contents:
This course covers psychological topics that inform students about the
automatic nature of our minds, such as memory, stereotypes, and
perception, in traditional lecture and discussion formats. This
empirical knowledge is applied to real-world problems such as hiring
discrimination, public policy, or politics, through class
demonstrations and activities.
Instructor: Hawkins
PSYC 4559-3: Social-Cognitive Development: Learning from Others
Credits: 3
Prerequisites: None
Enrollment Restrictions: 4th years: Psychology Majors/Minors and Cognitive Science Majors
Description of course contents:
Could you imagine trying to learn everything you know from firsthand
experience? Learning from other people saves us time, and gives us
opportunities to learn about interesting things that would be difficult
or dangerous to learn about otherwise – who Thomas Jefferson is or to
avoid touching hot stoves, for example. But blindly believing
everything you’re told isn’t always beneficial either: everybody makes
mistakes, after all! So, how do we learn when to believe other people
and when to be skeptical? By the time we are about seven years old, we
have developed surprisingly sophisticated means to evaluate and make
judgments about the quality of information we receive and the people
who provide it, and are able to use these judgments to guide our
learning and make predictions about our social world. In this course we
will read cutting edge research, make live observations, and reflect on
how children learn from other people.
Here is a snapshot of the range of topics we will cover:
1) How children develop an understanding of others’ mental states
2) Individual differences that influence children’s learning (e.g., autism, siblings)
3) How children learn to make sense of and predict the behavior of other people
4) How these factors contribute to social cognitive development (e.g., morality)
Instructor: Kondrad
PSYC 4559-5: Autobiography and Identity
Credits: 3
Prerequisites: None
Enrollment Restrictions: 4th years: Psychology Majors/Minors and Cognitive Science Majors
Description of course contents:
This course is intended to explore the psychological intersection of
autobiography and identity. Autobiographies, generally understood as
conscious presentations of self, vary widely across cultures and time.
In this case, the focus will be on the span from the historically early
statements in the Western canon, such as tomb inscriptions, Res Gestae of Augustus, and the Confessions of St. Augustine through late 20th and early 21st century autobiographies, such as The Woman Warrior by Kingston, Notes of A Native Son by Baldwin, and Leaving Pipe Shop
by McDowell. The psychological ideas of identity and the narrative of
oneself will be explored at the same time, using contemporary
materials, such as Schacter’s Searching for Memory, Lehrer’s Proust Was a Neuroscientist, and McAdams’s The Stories We Live By.
The focus of discussion will be on how identity is represented, how the
author selects and describes aspects of his or her life, and how we can
understand these choices in light of current research on memory and
other, related cognitive processes. Instructor: Hale
PSYC 5315: Pleasure
Credits: 3
Prerequisites: None
Enrollment Restrictions: 4th years: Psychology Majors/Minors and Cognitive Science Majors; GSAS
Description of course contents:
This seminar explores the nature of pleasure. It is divided into
three parts. The first deals with pleasures of the body, such as tonic
(sustained) pleasures and relief pleasures. The second deals with the
pleasurability of episodes and their relation to the pervasive human
propensity to create narratives. The third deals with the context
within which episodes emerge and analyses the stricture of lives.
Instructor: Kubovy
PSYC 5559-2: Individual Differences in Cognition and Personality
Credits: 3
Prerequisites: None
Enrollment Restrictions: 4th years: Psychology Majors/Minors and Cognitive Science Majors; GSAS
Description of course contents:
This course is a survey of individual differences in personality and
cognition. Among the topics to be covered are methods of assessing
individual differences in personality and cognition, relations between
personality and cognition, influences of nature and nurture,
developmental trends, neural substrates, and prediction of real world
outcomes. The organization will be a seminar with the instructor
presenting an overview of the topic in the first half of each class and
student discussion in the second half.
Instructor: Salthouse
PSYC 5559-3: Measurement: Item Response Theory
Credits: 3
Prerequisites: PSYC 3006 or PSYC 7710
Enrollment Restrictions: 4th years: Psychology Majors/Minors and Cognitive Science Majors; GSAS
Description of course contents:
This course is designed to introduce you to the basic concepts of item
response theory (IRT) and their application to substantive
psychological problems. By the end of this semester you should be able
to: a) understand and apply the principles of item response theory in
your own research and in evaluating the research of others, b) perform
and interpret item response theory model analyses for dichotomous and
polytomous data, using various IRT programs, and c) communicate IRT
research findings to an audience of psychologists.
Instructor: Schmidt
PSYC 5559-4: Machine Learning and Data Mining
Credits: 3
Prerequisites: None
Enrollment Restrictions: 4th years: Psychology Majors/Minors and Cognitive Science Majors
Description of course contents:
While most psychological studies ask "is something different between
groups?", in this course we will introduce quantitative methods to
answer the question "what is different between groups?", ie., we ask
which part (or combination) of our data maximizes the chances to
distinguish between given groups. To make a computer answer this
question, we will introduce some foundations of machine learning and
play with some of these techniques.
Instructor: Von Oertzen
PSYC 5559-6: Brain Systems Involved in Learning and Memory
*Note:
PSYC 5559-6 may be used to fulfill either the Cognitive Psychology or
the Neuroscience area requirement, but not both.
Credits: 3
Prerequisites: PSYC 2200 or PSYC 4200
Enrollment Restrictions: 4th years: Psychology Majors/Minors and Cognitive Science Majors and Neuroscience Majors; GSAS
Description of course contents:
The seminar will examine historical and current experimental findings
that describe the contribution of neuroanatomical structures in
regulating memory formation. An extensive review of the literature will
be covered to understand how separate brain regions interact to modify
our capacity to learn and then encode new information into memory
storage. The literature reviews will assist in identifying how activity
in specific brain regions regulates decision making, memory storage
during sleep, spatial learning, memory for emotionally-laden events,
post traumatic stress disorder, drug addiction, Alzheimer's disease,
learning disabilities, etc.
Instructor: Williams
Neuroscience
PSYC 2200: Introduction to Psychobiology
Credits: 3
Prerequisites: None
Enrollment Restrictions: None
Description of course contents: After an overview of brain structure and
organization, the course examines what we know about the biological bases of
perception, learning and memory, emotion and psychopathology, as well as the
regulatory behaviors: sleep, thirst, eating, sex, and those associated with psychoneuroimmunology.
Instructor: Hill
PSYC 3220: Neurobiology of Learning and Memory
Credits: 3
Prerequisites: 6 credits in Psychology, including PSYC 2200
Enrollment Restrictions: Psychology Majors /Minors and Cognitive Science Majors
Description of course contents:
This seminar will examine the neural basis of learning and memory. We
will study brain systems that mediate different types of learning and
memory as well as the cellular and molecular mechanisms that allow
these systems to acquire and store information. The course will begin
with a historical overview of learning and memory research in
psychology and transition into modern studies in behavioral
neuroscience. Topics will include memory consolidation, neural
plasticity, cellular competition for memory storage, the role of
neurogenesis in learning and memory and mechanisms of retention and
forgetting. We will also discuss disorders that produce memory
impairments in humans and current attempts to model these in animals
and develop treatments.
Instructor: Wiltgen
PSYC 5200: Current Topics in Psychobiology
Credits: 3
Prerequisites: PSYC 2200 or PSYC 4220 or Graduate Standing
Enrollment Restrictions: 4th years: Psychology Majors/Minors and Cognitive Science Majors; Neuroscience Majors; GSAS
Description of course contents: The class will examine recent scientific articles and theories of brain structure and function.
Instructor: Brunjes
PSYC 5559-1: Affective Neuroscience
Credits: 3
Prerequisites:
Enrollment Restrictions: 4th years: Psychology Majors/Minors and Cognitive Science Majors; GSAS
Description of course contents:
Affective neuroscience is the study of the neural bases of emotion.
The main goals of this course are: a) to provide an introduction to the
major contemporary theories of emotion; b) to provide an introduction
to theory and research into the neuroanatomical and neurochemical
correlates and substrates of emotion and affective psychopathology; and
c) to provide an introduction to the practical, methodological and
inferential challenges facing affective neuroscience as a discipline.
Instructor: Coan
PSYC 5559-6: Brain Systems Involved in Learning and Memory
*Note:
PSYC 5559-6 may be used to fulfill either the Neuroscience or the
Cognitive Psychology area requirement, but not both.
Credits: 3
Prerequisites: PSYC 2200 or PSYC 4200
Enrollment Restrictions: 4th years: Psychology Majors/Minors and Cognitive Science Majors and Neuroscience Majors; GSAS
Description of course contents:
The seminar will examine historical and current experimental findings
that describe the contribution of neuroanatomical structures in
regulating memory formation. An extensive review of the literature will
be covered to understand how separate brain regions interact to modify
our capacity to learn and then encode new information into memory
storage. The literature reviews will assist in identifying how activity
in specific brain regions regulates decision making, memory storage
during sleep, spatial learning, memory for emotionally-laden events,
post traumatic stress disorder, drug addiction, Alzheimer's disease,
learning disabilities, etc.
Instructor: Williams
BIOL 3250: Introduction to Animal Behavior
Credits: 3
Prerequisites: BIOL 2010 and BIOL 2020
Description of course contents:
An introduction to comparative studies of animal behavior from
neuroethological and evolutionary perspectives. The first deals with
proximate causes of behavior, with emphases on motor, sensory and
central aspects of the nervous system. The second deals with ultimate
causes, with emphases on natural selection, natural history, and
adaptive aspects of behavior.
Instructors: Friesen
BIOL 4310: Sensory Biology/BIOL 7310: Sensory Neurobiology
Credits: 3
Prerequisites: BIOL 3170
Description of course contents:
Examines the anatomy, physiology, and molecular biology of many
sensory modalities such as vision, audition, and chemosensation.
General features of sensory systems are described.
Instructor: Provencio
BIOL 4490: Neural Systems and Behavior
Credits: 3
Prerequisites: BIOL 3170 and BIOL 3250
Description of course contents:
This is an upper level lecture/discussion course for students
interested in pursuing additional studies in neurobiology beyond the
introductory level.
Instructor: Mellon
BME 3636: Neural Network Models of Cognition and Brain Computation
Credits: 3
Prerequisites: CS 1110 and BME 2101 or Instructor Permission
Description of course contents:
This is an introductory course to neural networks research,
specifically biologically-based networks that reproduce cognitive
phenomena. The goal of this course is to teach the basic thinking and
methodologies used in constructing and understanding neural-like
networks.
Instructor: Levy
Linguistics
ANTH 5401: Linguistic Field Methods
Credits: 3
Prerequisite: None
Description of course contents:
In this course we will work with a native speaker of an "exotic"
language (i.e., a language that is not commonly taught in the U.S.,
hence likely not to be familiar to any of the students in the class).
We try to figure out the phonological and grammatical structure of the
language based on data collected from the native speaker consultant in
class. Attendance is therefore mandatory.
Instructor: Contini-Morava
EDHS 5020: Introduction to Speech and Hearing Science
Credits: 3
Prerequisites: EDHS 501 and 505
Description of course contents:
Examines principal concepts and procedures for the study of
physiologic, perceptual, and acoustic aspects of voice, speech, and
hearing.
Instructor: Loncke
PSYC 4110: Psycholinguistics
*Note: PSYC 4110 may be used to fulfill either the Linguistics or the Cognitive Psychology area requirement, but not both.
Credits: 3
Prerequisites: None
Enrollment Restrictions: 4th years: Psychology Majors/Minors, Cognitive Science Majors, Linguistics and Communication Disorders Majors/Minors.
Description of course contents:
This course will discuss how linguistic models help us to understand
the psychology of language. We will focus on the emergence of language
in children, acquisition and development of language, language
disorders and neurolinguistics, sociolinguistics, and bilingualism.
Instructor: Loncke
PSYC 4111: Language Development and Disorders
*Note:
PSYC 4111 may be used to fulfill either the Linguistics or the
Cognitive Psychology area requirement, but not both. Either PSYC 4111:
Language Development and Disorders (Bonvillian) or PSYC 5310:
Developmental Psycholinguistics (Bonvillian) may be taken for credit,
but not both.
Credits: 3
Prerequisites: None
Enrollment Restrictions: 4th years: Psychology Majors/Minors, Cognitive Science Majors, Linguistics Majors/Minors.
Description of course contents:
This course will focus on language and cognitive development in persons
with disabilities. Among the populations examined will be children with
autistic disorder, children with Williams syndrome, deaf children,
developmentally dysphasic children, adults with aphasia, and children
with severe mental retardation. In addition to spoken language
development, the course will examine the acquisition of sign
communication skills.
Instructor: Bonvillian
PSYC 4120: Psychology of Reading
*Note:
PSYC 4120 may be used to fulfill either the Linguistics or the
Cognitive Psychology area requirement, but not both.
Credits: 3
Prerequisites: PSYC 3005 or Instructor Permission
Enrollment Restrictions: 4th years: Psychology Majors/Minors, Cognitive Science Majors, and Linguistics Majors/Minors
Description of course contents: For
psychologists who study the psychology of reading, it sometimes amazes
us that most literate people do not think much about the reading
process. If you ask the typical person about how reading works, a
typical response is that …it just does. I look at words on a page and then the sounds come out of my mouth. You might also hear… I do not know how I do it but for as long as I can remember I could do it.
Under certain circumstances, however, a deeper level of evaluation is
forthcoming and people report that it is a very complicated process.
Listening to someone who has some type of reading impairment, observing
young children as they are learning to read, wondering about the
meaning of a passage (Did the main character insult a minor character
or was it the other way around?), debating the pronunciation of a word
(greasy, Roanoke, Staunton, theater, insurance), or reading a passage
in a second language, readers make evaluations/decisions during the
reading process. The focus of this class, Psychology of Reading,
is the study of the reading process; what happens when we process the
squiggles on the page to meaningful information that we can use. This
includes word processing, sentence processing, speed-reading, text
comprehension, etc. All of this is related to how the brain works and
how we think. We will read basic/historical information from texts,
review recent psychological research articles, and consider some
hands-on experiences related to the reading process. The Psychology of Reading
course is an interesting mix of experimental & cognitive psychology
and structural linguistics, as well as psychoneurology, phonetics,
anthropology, sociology, education, and so on.
Instructor: Adams
SPAN 3200: Introduction to Hispanic Linguistics
Credits: 3
Description of course contents:
This course offers a rigorous introduction to the formal study of the
Spanish language. Topics include: articulatory phonetics, phonology,
morphology, syntax, semantics, historical linguistics and dialectology.
Taught in Spanish.
Instructor: Velazquez-Mendoza
SPAN 4530: Second Language Acquisition
Credits: 3
Prerequisites: SPAN 3010 and SPAN 3000 or SPAN 3200 or another
course in Linguistics Description of course contents:
How do people learn a second language? How are first language
acquisition and second language acquisition different? Why are some
learners more successful than others in learning a second language? How
does one measure “success” in second language acquisition? How do we
define “competence”? I invite you to join me in the exploration of
these and other exciting questions. Together we will discover the
processes and mechanisms that drive language acquisition by studying
how three different areas – linguistics, psychology, and sociocultural
perspectives – have contributed to the major theories and ideas
informing the field of Second Language Acquisition. Conducted in
Spanish.
Instructor: Scida
Philosophy
PHIL 3320: Epistemology
Credits: 3
Prerequisite: None
Description of course contents: Studies problems concerned with the foundations of knowledge, perception, and rational belief.
Instructor: Langsam
Computer
Science
All Computer Science courses are acceptable except CS 1010 and CS 1020. ECE 2066: Science of Information will count for credit but does not fill the CS area requirement.
The most common introductory-level Computer Science courses for Cognitive Science majors are:
CS 1110: Introduction to Programming (Previously CS 101)
CS 1120: From Ada and Euclid to Quantum Computing and the World Wide Web (Previously CS 150)
CS 2102: Discrete Mathematics I (Previously CS 202)
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