PSYC4460 - Everyday Psychology

Status
A
Activity
SEM
Section number integer
301
Title (text only)
Everyday Psychology
Term
2025C
Subject area
PSYC
Section number only
301
Section ID
PSYC4460301
Course number integer
4460
Meeting times
WF 10:15 AM-11:44 AM
Meeting location
PSYL A30
Level
undergraduate
Instructors
Loretta Flanagan-Cato
Description
PSYC 4460 is an activity-based course with three major goals. First, the course is an opportunity for psychology and cognitive science undergrad majors to develop their professional and science communication skills and share their enthusiasm for these topics with high school students at a nearby public high school in West Philadelphia. In this regard, Penn students will prepare demonstrations and hands-on activities to engage local high school students, increase their knowledge in functions of the mind and brain, providing insights that may promote well being for the high school students and their community. This will be accomplished as students design and execute hands-on/minds-on activities on a range of psychology topics. There will be 10 sessions across the semester for these lessons, allowing the college and high school students to develop a consistent teacher-learner relationship.
Second, students will explore the literature that discusses the need for better bridges between scientific research and the broader community. Discussions will incorporate the students' experiences, including challenges and rewards, as they bring psychology lessons to local youth. This academic portion of the course will include guest lectures from the Penn community who actively engaged in community partnerships.
Third, students will be challenged to consider solutions for any problems that they encounter using a Theory of Change framework. This aspect of the course will result in a final project in which students much create logical, realistic, evidence-based links between interventions, indicators of change, and ultimate impacts to mitigate the problems.
Course number only
4460
Use local description
No

PSYC4340 - Research Experience in Perception

Status
A
Activity
SEM
Section number integer
401
Title (text only)
Research Experience in Perception
Term
2025C
Subject area
PSYC
Section number only
401
Section ID
PSYC4340401
Course number integer
4340
Meeting times
MW 10:15 AM-11:44 AM
Meeting location
COLL 311A
Level
undergraduate
Instructors
Johannes Burge
Description
In this research course, students will begin by first replicating earlier experiments to measure human visual memory capacity. After several class discussions to discuss ideas, each student will design and conduct their own experiment to further investigate visual and/or familiarity memory.
Course number only
4340
Cross listings
VLST2120401
Use local description
No

PSYC3803 - Adv Sem in Psy: Mod Choice Beh

Status
A
Activity
SEM
Section number integer
401
Title (text only)
Adv Sem in Psy: Mod Choice Beh
Term
2025C
Subject area
PSYC
Section number only
401
Section ID
PSYC3803401
Course number integer
3803
Meeting times
R 12:00 PM-2:59 PM
Meeting location
MCNB 286-7
Level
undergraduate
Instructors
Sudeep Bhatia
Description
How do people decide and how can we study decision processes using formal mathematical and computational models? This course will address this question. It will examine popular quantitative modeling techniques in psychology, economics, cognitive science, and neuroscience, and will apply these techniques to study choice behavior. Students will learn how to test the predictions of choice models, fit the models on behavioral data, and quantitatively examine the goodness-of-fit. They will also get practice formulating their own models for describing human behavior. This class will have a major programming component, however no prior programming experience is required.
Course number only
3803
Cross listings
PPE4803401
Use local description
No

PSYC3780 - Adv Sem in Psych: Obedience

Status
A
Activity
SEM
Section number integer
401
Title (text only)
Adv Sem in Psych: Obedience
Term
2025C
Subject area
PSYC
Section number only
401
Section ID
PSYC3780401
Course number integer
3780
Meeting times
R 1:45 PM-4:44 PM
Meeting location
PSYL A30
Level
undergraduate
Instructors
Edward Royzman
Description
Though almost half a century old, Milgram’s 1961-1962 studies of “destructive obedience” continue to puzzle, fascinate, and alarm. The main reason for their continued grip on the field’s attention (other than the boldness of the idea and elegance of execution) may be simply that they leave us with a portrait of human character that is radically different from the one that we personally wish to endorse or that the wider culture teaches us to accept. In this seminar, we will take an in-depth look at these famous studies (along with the more recent replications) and explore their various psychological, political and philosophical ramifications.
Course number only
3780
Cross listings
PPE4802401
Use local description
No

PSYC3730 - Seminar in Judgment and Decision Making

Status
A
Activity
SEM
Section number integer
301
Title (text only)
Seminar in Judgment and Decision Making
Term
2025C
Subject area
PSYC
Section number only
301
Section ID
PSYC3730301
Course number integer
3730
Meeting times
MW 10:15 AM-11:44 AM
Meeting location
EDUC 007
Level
undergraduate
Instructors
Barbara Ann Mellers
Description
This course is designed to help you become a better decision maker. By the end of the semester, you should have the skills to approach decision making from a broader perspective with new tools and a new awareness of many common errors and biases. You will learn about normative decisions (how people should make choices if they want to use principles of rationality, logic and probability), descriptive decisions (how people really do make decisions) and prescriptive decisions (how people can make better decisions given normative principles and what we know about human behavior). We’ll discuss the theoretical foundations of the field, some of the key empirical insights. We’ll discuss what it means to have good judgment and how experts and novices differ. We look at decision making in such as public policy, medicine, the law, business, and intelligence analysis. Decision making is something we do every day, many times a day. It is so natural that some people don’t even realize they are doing it. Many of the insights from this field have real-world implications.
Course number only
3730
Use local description
No

PSYC3440 - Friendship and Attraction

Status
X
Activity
SEM
Section number integer
301
Title (text only)
Friendship and Attraction
Term
2025C
Subject area
PSYC
Section number only
301
Section ID
PSYC3440301
Course number integer
3440
Meeting times
CANCELED
Level
undergraduate
Instructors
Caroline Jane Connolly
Description
This seminar primarily focuses on heterosexual friendship between men and women, and the methodological issues of investigating such relationships. The scope for sexuality and romance in heterosexual opposite-sex friendship will be explored, as well as the possibility that men and women perceive opposite-sex friendship differently from each other. The ramifications of sex, romance, and incongruent perspectives in these relationships will be discussed, as will intimacy, competition, homosexual friendship, and same-sex friendship.
Course number only
3440
Use local description
No

PSYC3400 - Positive Psychology Seminar: Positive Education (SNF Paideia Program Course)

Status
X
Activity
SEM
Section number integer
301
Title (text only)
Positive Psychology Seminar: Positive Education (SNF Paideia Program Course)
Term
2025C
Subject area
PSYC
Section number only
301
Section ID
PSYC3400301
Course number integer
3400
Meeting times
CANCELED
Level
undergraduate
Instructors
Caroline Jane Connolly
Description
This intensive, discussion-based seminar will equip you with useful insight and critical analysis about Positive Psychology by emphasizing scientific literacy. The workload for this seminar requires intensive reading. To excel in this seminar, students must be willing to enthusiastically read, dissect, and critique ideas within Positive Psychology. This requires students to articulate various ideas in verbal and written form.
Course number only
3400
Use local description
No

PSYC3350 - Quantitative Methods in Cognitive Science: Data Analysis, Modeling, and Visualization

Status
A
Activity
LEC
Section number integer
401
Title (text only)
Quantitative Methods in Cognitive Science: Data Analysis, Modeling, and Visualization
Term
2025C
Subject area
PSYC
Section number only
401
Section ID
PSYC3350401
Course number integer
3350
Meeting times
TF 3:30 PM-5:00 PM
Meeting location
GLAB 102
Level
undergraduate
Instructors
Alan A Stocker
Description
This seminar introduces students to common quantitative methods used to study cognitive processes based on behavioral measurements. The course covers experimental design, data analysis and visualization, and an introduction to basic models of cognitive behavior. Students will get to know common experimental designs to test cognitive behavior, how to perform hypothesis testing, and apply and fit theoretical models such as signal detection theory, ideal observer models, and drift-diffusion models. Throughout the course, students will independently analyze cognitive behavioral datasets, culminating in a research paper that showcases their ability to use the learned methods for an unbiased and effective analysis and interpretation of cognitive processes, and to visualize and present their results.
A key emphasis of the course is on scientific rigor: students will learn to avoid common mistakes in analyzing, interpreting, and presenting data that have substantially harmed the reputation of cognitive and psychological sciences within the scientific community as well as the general public (e.g. the “reproduction crisis”).
Course number only
3350
Use local description
No

PSYC3301 - Neurobiology of Learning and Memory

Status
A
Activity
SEM
Section number integer
401
Title (text only)
Neurobiology of Learning and Memory
Term
2025C
Subject area
PSYC
Section number only
401
Section ID
PSYC3301401
Course number integer
3301
Meeting times
TR 1:45 PM-3:14 PM
Meeting location
VAGL 2000
Level
undergraduate
Instructors
Mary Ellen Kelly
Description
This course focuses on the current state of our knowledge about the neurobiological basis of learning and memory. A combination of lectures and student seminars will explore the molecular and cellular basis of learning in invertebrates and vertebrates from a behavioral and neural perspective.
Course number only
3301
Cross listings
BIOL4142401, NRSC4442401
Use local description
No

PSYC3233 - Seminar in Cognitive Neuroscience: Brain Development

Status
A
Activity
SEM
Section number integer
401
Title (text only)
Seminar in Cognitive Neuroscience: Brain Development
Term
2025C
Subject area
PSYC
Section number only
401
Section ID
PSYC3233401
Course number integer
3233
Meeting times
R 12:00 PM-2:59 PM
Meeting location
GLAB 100
Level
undergraduate
Instructors
Michael Arcaro
Description
This discussion-based seminar will focus on the neural bases of cognitive development.
Each week the class will discuss a selection of papers that consider the roles of genes and environment on topics including the development of perceptual abilities, language, and cognition. The course will cover several aspects of pre- and postnatal brain and behavioral development with particular emphasis on animal models. This course is intended for students interested in neurobiology, cognitive psychology, evolutionary psychology and development.
Course number only
3233
Cross listings
NRSC4233401
Use local description
No
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