Graduate Program Cognitive Science

Master

In Ithaca (USA)

Price on request

Description

  • Type

    Master

  • Location

    Ithaca (USA)

With a minor in cognitive science, you’ll study disciplines concerned with the fundamental capacities of the mind, such as perception, memory, reasoning, language, the organization of motor action and their neural correlates. This interdisciplinary study encompasses departments in the College of Arts & Sciences such as computer science, economics, linguistics, mathematics, neurobiology and behavior, philosophy, psychology and sociology; disciplines in the colleges of Engineering, Human Ecology and Agriculture and Life Sciences; and the Information Science Program and Johnson Graduate School of Management.

Facilities

Location

Start date

Ithaca (USA)
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Ithaca, Nueva York 14850, EE. UU., 14850

Start date

On request

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Reviews

This centre's achievements

2019

All courses are up to date

The average rating is higher than 3.7

More than 50 reviews in the last 12 months

This centre has featured on Emagister for 5 years

Subjects

  • Cognitive Science
  • Psychology

Course programme

Cognitive Science Program
Cornell University
278a Uris Hall
Ithaca, NY 14853

All colloquia are held in 202 Uris Hall and begin at 12:20pm.


November 2016: From the Cornell Chronicle: International team compares English, French in the brain. From Cornell, Prof. John Hale (Dept. of Linguistics) and Dr. Wenming Luh (Cornell MRI Facility) are involved.

September 2016: In a study that shatters a cornerstone concept in linguistics, an analysis of nearly two-thirds of the world's languages shows that humans tend to use the same sounds for common objects and ideas, no matter what language they're speaking. Published today in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, the research demonstrates a robust statistical relationship between certain basic concepts - from body parts to familial relationships and aspects of the natural world - and the sounds humans around the world use to describe them. "These sound symbolic patterns show up again and again across the world, independent of the geographical dispersal of humans and independent of language lineage," said Morten H. Christiansen, professor of psychology and director of Cornell's Cognitive Neuroscience Lab. "There does seem to be something about the human condition that leads to these patterns. We don't know what it is, but we know it's there."

Graduate Program Cognitive Science

Price on request