Unformatted text preview:

Cogs 111: Introduction to Cognitive Science Spring 2008 Syllabus Instructor: Dr. Anthony Beavers Office: Olmstead Hall 342 Email: [email protected] Hours: MF 10:00-11:50 & 1:00-1:50; Office Phone: 488-2682 M 3:00-3:50; Tu 5:00-5:50; W 1:00-1:50 Time & Place: MWF 2:00-2:50 in KC 101 Course Description This course will introduce basic concepts, issues and methodologies associated with the interdis-ciplinary study of human cognition. Specific topics will include (among others) the nature and definition of mind, memory, perception, intelligence, and consciousness. We will also examine some elementary neuroscience, agent-environment relations, robotics and other efforts to model human intelligence using machines. Insights will be appropriately drawn from several fields, in-cluding anthropology, artificial intelligence, biology, linguistics, neuroscience, philosophy, psy-chology and robotics. N.B. This course is offered for general education credit as a three-hour non-lab science option, but it also serves as a requirement for majors and minors in cognitive science and majors in psy-chology. So, please do not expect an easy course. Cognitive science is difficult, exceedingly diffi-cult in places, but I will do my best to make things clear. Your carefully articulated questions will go a long way in helping in this regard. Methodology Individual class sessions will take a variety of forms. Sometimes they will involve further elucida-tion of key material in the reading assignment for the day. In these cases, I will pick one or two topics and add detail that is not covered in the book. On other occasions, I will present material that is not covered in the book at all. The main lesson for students to draw from this is that the textbook and my lectures supplement each other; you will not be getting a repeat of the text in class. As a consequence, doing well in the course requires your own initiative in reading and studying the text as well as striving for a reasonable comprehension of my lectures. Required Text Friedenberg, Jay and Gordon Silverman. Cognitive Science: An Introduction to the Study of Mind. London: Sage Publications, 2006. 1-4129-2568-1. Assignments Each student will be required to take three exams during the regular semester and a comprehen-sive, final exam at the end. In addition, each student will submit a five-page research paper as specified in the guidelines below. Grading 30% - Regular Exams (10% each) 25% - Final Exam 25% - Paper 20% - Class ParticipationPaper Requirements, Recommendations and Evaluation The topic for your paper must be directly pertinent to cognitive science and must involve the use of empirical research published in an appropriate scholarly journal. A minimum of four journal articles is required. Do not use encyclopedia entries or resources found online, unless they are articles pub-lished in a peer-reviewed, academic journal. Avoid news stories from the popular press, since these often exaggerate the more modest claims made in scientific research. For this paper, think in terms of reporting on a particular research experiment. Address particulars such as how the experiment was designed and what it managed to show. You are not expected to do your own experiments. Do not attempt broad topics like the current state of robotics in cognitive science or how the brain allows us to think. Rather, think small. In fact, the more narrow your topic, the better your paper will be. The safest course of action for this paper is to start with a single journal article. A quick study of it should point you toward other articles that you will need. However, if you are going to take this ap-proach, and I highly recommend that you do, you must start early, since you may be making use of interlibrary loan, and this will delay your research. Your paper must be longer than four pages and no longer than five, not including the cover page. It must be in Times New Roman, 12 point font and formatted in the APA style, 5th edition. (Copies of the style manual are available in the library, bookstore and at Barnes & Noble.) Be sure to include a title. Staple the paper in the top, left corner. Submit it to Turnitin.com and provide me with a print copy on or before April 7th. Late papers will be penalized a part letter grade for each day that they are late. Your papers will be evaluated according to the following qualities, though they will not be graded ac-cording to an average based on an individual assessment of each area. (In other words, I will con-sider the paper as a whole looking at the following for guidance.) • Focus – Does the paper stick to its topic, addressing necessary details while avoiding ex-traneous ones? • Organization – Is the paper well-organized with respect to the order and presentation of ideas? Are ideas properly subordinated throughout the paper? • Clarity – Is the paper generally clear and the prose readable? Is the thesis and argument explicit? • Factuality – Are the factual assertions advanced in the paper true? Are they adequately supported by documentation as needed? • Documentation – Is the selection and use of sources appropriate for the topic? Is the pa-per properly documented with citations to your sources? • Format – Does the paper adhere to the formatting guidelines of the 5th edition of the APA style manual? • Grammar – Is language used according to the rules of grammar? Is it properly academic? When it comes to help with academic style in writing, I have found no book better than Joseph M. Williams, Style: Toward Clarity and Grace. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 1990. This book is not a writing manual for beginning students, but a carefully prepared handbook for those who already know how to write in general and wish to address academic audiences. If you wish to work in academia, regardless of field, this book is a must read.Crick Lectures The University of Evansville’s programs in the cognitive and neural sciences jointly sponsor an annual lecture series on topics of mutual interest to the two programs. This semester’s “Crick Lectures in the Cognitive and Neural Sciences” are scheduled for Wednesday, February 20th and Wednesday, April 16th, 4:00-:500 p.m. in KC 101. The February lecture will be presented by Dr.


View Full Document

UE COGS 111 - Cogs 111 Syllabus

Documents in this Course
Load more
Download Cogs 111 Syllabus
Our administrator received your request to download this document. We will send you the file to your email shortly.
Loading Unlocking...
Login

Join to view Cogs 111 Syllabus and access 3M+ class-specific study document.

or
We will never post anything without your permission.
Don't have an account?
Sign Up

Join to view Cogs 111 Syllabus 2 2 and access 3M+ class-specific study document.

or

By creating an account you agree to our Privacy Policy and Terms Of Use

Already a member?