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THE UNIVERSITY of EDINBURGHDEGREE REGULATIONS & PROGRAMMES OF STUDY 2006/2007
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Cognitive Neuroscience of Language (VS1) (P01495)? Credit Points : 10 ? SCQF Level : 11 ? Acronym : INF-P-CNL-V This course is set-up as an advanced introduction to the cognitive neuroscience of language. It is designed primarily for graduate students in the MSc informatics program. How do we use language? What are the brain bases of language? This course endeavours to provide a state-of-the art survey on the current knowledge of the way the brain organizes itself to represent and process various types of language-related knowledge (from words to sentences, spoken or written). Entry Requirements? This course is only available to part year visiting students. ? This course is a variant of the following course : P00863 ? Pre-requisites : For Informatics PG students only, or by special permission of the School. Students should have a background in one or more of the following - Linguistics, Cognitive Psychology, Psycholinguistics, Cognitive Sciences, or Neurosciences. Students without such a background are encouraged to read one of the textbooks listed on the lecture website, in the section "making up for gaps in knowledge". ? Prohibited combinations : Brain and Language (PPL-4-BL-PS) Subject AreasHome subject areaCognitive Neuroscience, (School of Informatics, Schedule O) Other subject areasVision, Perception and Action, (School of Informatics, Schedule O) Delivery Information? Normal year taken : Postgraduate ? Delivery Period : Not being delivered ? Contact Teaching Time : 2 hour(s) per week for 10 weeks Summary of Intended Learning Outcomes
Students will have a solid base of knowledge, and the ability to discuss it, of the following:
-The fundamentals of brain neuroanatomy and have an overview of the most prevalent neuropsychological disorders. -The various study methods used in cognitive neuroscience (case studies of brain-damaged patients, experimental approach, functional neuroimaging techniques) -The relevance of studies involving brain imaging for psycholinguistic theories. -The major issues in the domain of brain and language -The contribution that each of the fields, cognitive psychology, neuropsychology, computational modelling, and brain-imaging, makes to the study of the question of the correlates between brain and language. Also why neuroscientists decided to take a muti-displinary approach by which they find evidences of different sorts to their question. At the end of this course students will be able to: -Read research papers in the areas of cognitive psychology, neuropsychology, and brain-imaging and to summarize their central ideas and/or results. -Perform a literature search to locate academic information appropriate to answer a specific question in neuroscience. -Read a set of articles thought to be all related to a research question and, based on this, to apprehend what the different dimensions of the question are and whether each paper provides or not a total or partial answer answer to this question. -Write a research paper using accurate, sound, verifiable, scholarly information. Assessment Information
Extended Essay 100%
Contact and Further InformationThe Course Secretary should be the first point of contact for all enquiries. Course Secretary Mr Neil McGillivray Course Organiser Dr Douglas Armstrong Course Website : http://www.inf.ed.ac.uk/teaching/courses/ School Website : http://www.informatics.ed.ac.uk/ College Website : http://www.scieng.ed.ac.uk/ |
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