Psy 15
Social Psychology
9 units (3-0-6)
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offered by announcement
The study of how people think about other people and behave toward or around others. Topics include attribution, social cognition, motivation and incentive, social influence, liking, stereotyping, deception, fairness and altruism, and conformity.
Instructor:
Castelli
Psy 16
Understanding Psychological Disorders
9 units (3-0-6)
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first term
A descriptive and theoretical survey of the major forms of psychopathology in children, adolescents, and adults. The course will examine current trends and research in the fields of mental health and psychopathology.
Instructor:
Castelli
Psy 20
Introduction to Cognitive Psychology
9 units (3-0-6)
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second term
This course will develop basic concepts in how humans process different kinds of information such as visual, auditory, and symbolic. These concepts will then be used to explore topics such as visual perception, attention and automaticity, working and long-term memory, imagery, knowledge representation, language acquisition and comprehension, judgement and choice, reasoning and decision making, problem solving, and group differences.
Instructor:
Spezio
Psy 25
Reading and Research in Psychology
Units to be determined by the instructor
Written report required. Graded pass/fail. Not available for credit toward humanities-social science requirement. Not offered 2009-10.
Psy 101
Selected Topics in Psychology
Units to be determined by arrangement with the instructor
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offered by announcement
Instructor:
Staff
CNS/SS/Psy/Bi 102 ab
Brains, Minds, and Society
9 units (3-0-6)
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second, third terms
Prerequisites: Bi/CNS 150 and CNS/Bi/Ph/CS 187, or instructor's permission.
Introduction to the computations made by the brain during economic and social decision making and their neural substrates. First quarter: Signal detection theory. Unconscious and conscious processing. Emotion and the somatic marker hypothesis. Perceptual decision making. Reinforcement learning. Goal and habit learning. Facial processing in social neuroscience. Second quarter: Optimal Bayesian decision making and prospect theory. Standard and behavioral game theory. Evolution and group decision making. Collective decision making by animals.
Instructors:
Adolphs, Camerer, Koch, Rangel
CNS/SS/Psy 110 abc
Cognitive Neuroscience Tools
5 units (1
|
5-0-3
This course covers tools and statistical methods used in cognitive neuroscience research. Topics vary from year to year depending on the interests of the students. Recent topics include statistical modeling for fMRI data, experimental design for fMRI, and the preprocessing of fMRI data.
Instructor:
Rangel
CNS/Bi/Psy 120
The Neuronal Basis of Consciousness
9 units (4-0-5)
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third term
What are the correlates of consciousness in the brain? The course provides a framework for beginning to address this question using a reductionist point of view. It focuses on the neurophysiology of the primate visual system, but also discusses alternative approaches more suitable for work with rodents. Topics to be covered include the anatomy and physiology of the primate's visual system (striate and extrastriate cortical areas, dorsal/ventral distinction, visual-frontal connections), iconic and working memory, selective visual attention, visual illusions, clinical studies (neglect, blind sight, split-brain, agnosia), direct stimulation of the brain, delay and trace associative conditioning, conscious and unconscious olfactory processing, and philosophical approaches to consciousness.
Instructor:
Koch
Psy 125
Reading and Research in Psychology
Same as Psy 25, but for graduate credit. Not available for credit toward humanities-social science requirement.
Psy/CNS 130
Introduction to Human Memory
9 units (3-0-6)
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second term
The course offers an overview of experimental findings and theoretical issues in the study of human memory. Topics include iconic and echoic memory, working memory, spatial memory, implicit learning and memory; forgetting: facts vs. skills, memory for faces; retrieval: recall vs. recognition, context-dependent memory, semantic memory, spreading activation models and connectionist networks, memory and emotion, infantile amnesia, memory development, and amnesia. Not offered 2009-10.
CNS/Psy/Bi 131
The Psychology of Learning and Motivation
9 units (3-0-6)
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second term
This course will serve as an introduction to basic concepts, findings, and theory from the field of behavioral psychology, covering areas such as principles of classical conditioning, blocking and conditioned inhibition, models of classical conditioning, instrumental conditioning, reinforcement schedules, punishment and avoidance learning. The course will track the development of ideas from the beginnings of behavioral psychology in the early 20th century to contemporary learning theory. Not offered 2009-10.
Bi/CNS/Psy 133
Neurobiology and Evolution of Emotion: Do Flies Have Feelings?
9 units (3-0-6)
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third term
Prerequisites: Bi/CNS 150 or instructor's permission. Recommended Bi 156 and SS/Psy/Bi/CNS 140.
Fundamental issues in emotion research at multiple levels of experimental analysis, and in species ranging from humans to mice to flies. Psychological theories and data from studies in humans will be presented to clarify the relationship between emotional behavior, affect, feelings, and moods, which in turn will form the basis for exploring whether and how different animal models can be used to investigate the neural circuit and molecular bases of emotion. Can genetically tractable model organisms such as flies show "emotional behavior," or have "feelings"? What have we learned from animal models about the neural circuit and genetic bases of emotional behavior, and how does it relate to what we know from human studies? Disorders of emotion will also be discussed, including affective disorders in humans, and their potential animal models.
Instructors:
Anderson, Adolphs
SS/Psy/Bi/CNS 140
Social Neuroscience
9 units (3-0-6)
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third term
Prerequisites: Bi/CNS 150 recommended.
This course will survey the neural basis of social behavior, drawing on both theoretical and empirical approaches. Recent findings from cognitive neuroscience will be discussed, with an emphasis on data from humans. Topics will include motivation, emotion, theory of mind, social perception, and simulation. Not offered 2009-10.
CNS/Bi/SS/Psy 176
Cognition
12 units (6-0-6)
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third term
The cornerstone of current progress in understanding the mind, the brain, and the relationship between the two is the study of human and animal cognition. This course will provide an in-depth survey and analysis of behavioral observations, theoretical accounts, computational models, patient data, electrophysiological studies, and brain-imaging results on mental capacities such as attention, memory, emotion, object representation, language, and cognitive development.
Instructor:
Shimojo
SS/Psy/Bi/CNS 255
Topics in Emotion and Social Cognition
9 units (3-0-6)
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third term
Prerequisites: SS/Psy/Bi/CNS 140 or instructor's permission.
This course will cover recent findings in the psychology and neurobiology of emotion and social behavior. What role does emotion play in other cognitive processes, such as memory, attention, and decision making? What are the component processes that guide social behavior? To what extent is the processing of social information domain-specific? Readings from the current literature will emphasize functional imaging, psychophysical, and lesion studies in humans.
Instructor:
Adolphs
Published Date:
July 28, 2022