Courses by semester
Courses for Spring 2026
Complete Cornell University course descriptions and section times are in the Class Roster.
| Course ID | Title | Offered |
|---|---|---|
| PSYCH 1101 |
Introduction to Psychology
Why are people superstitious? Why do people blush when they are embarrassed? What is intelligence (and are IQ tests a good way to measure it)? Why don't psychopaths feel guilty when they harm others? How reliable are childhood memories? Why do we laugh? Do violent video games make people act violently? Why do some people seem instantly trustworthy and others seem creepy? How do we choose whom to sleep with, date, or marry? How does stress affect our body? While questions like these have been asked for centuries, psychology has begun to provide answers to these - and other questions about the human mind - by applying the tools of scientific investigation. In this course you will receive a broad introduction to the science of psychology: from the history of the field and its major advances, to the latest research on topics such as perception, memory, intelligence, morality, sexuality, mental illness, religion, language, and creativity. You will also learn about the tools and methods psychologists use to investigate the mind, such as observing how the mind of a child changes and develops over time, looking at people across cultures, measuring brain activity, and experimentally manipulating everything from the shape of a figure presented on a computer screen, to the smell of a room, or the attractiveness of the experimenter. |
|
| PSYCH 1120 |
FWS:Personality & Social Psychology
Personality and Social Psychology area are interested in understanding how people think, feel, and act in real-world social situations. There is a particular interest in how people make sense of the social world around them, as represented by research programs on judgment and decision making, attribution, self-knowledge, affect and emotion, and stereotyping/prejudice. Frequent topics of inquiry include whether people reach accurate or erroneous judgments about themselves and others, how people arrive at their decisions, and how those decisions can be influenced by emotions or factors outside of awareness and more. Full details for PSYCH 1120 - FWS:Personality & Social Psychology |
|
| PSYCH 1140 |
FWS: Perception, Cognition, and Development
How do we perceive, learn about, and store information about the environments around us? How does what we have learned affect how we perceive and understand? PCD researchers in the graduate field of psychology at Cornell study human perception, language, and memory, as well as the development of various cognitive functions in infants. The methods they use are diverse, and range from human behavioral experiments in development, perception, and psycholinguistics, through computational modeling and simulation of auditory, visual, and language processes, to human electrophysiology by means of event-related potential (ERP) analysis. Full details for PSYCH 1140 - FWS: Perception, Cognition, and Development |
|
| PSYCH 2090 |
Developmental Psychology
A comprehensive introduction to current thinking and research in developmental psychology that approaches topics from both psychobiological and cognitive perspectives. We will use a comparative approach to assess principles of development change. The course focuses on the development of perception, action, cognition, language, and social understanding in infancy and early childhood. |
|
| PSYCH 2091 |
WIM: Developmental Psychology
This section is highly recommended for students who are interested in learning about the topics covered in the main course through writing and discussion. |
|
| PSYCH 2120 |
Social Cognition & the Legal System
Since its inception the US legal system has been a system of social cognition and judgment: Humans perceiving and judging other humans to determine their fate. There are things about the system to admire, but major problems persist. Innocent people get convicted; guilty people go free. Why? Historically, that system built on social cognition has been ignorant about how human judgment actually works—producing errors as a result. This course explores the science of how we think about other people—our perceptions, memories, and judgments—can shape decisions and outcomes in the legal system, sometimes with devastating consequences. Grounded in psychological science and research on social cognition, we’ll examine how mental shortcuts, impression formation, moral judgment and group dynamics influence everything from eyewitness testimony to police investigations, from jury deliberations to sentencing. We will apply classic and cutting-edge research to identify what went wrong in real-world cases and how we could do better. Students will learn how understanding the psychology of social thinking can help explain—and ultimately improve—the legal system. Full details for PSYCH 2120 - Social Cognition & the Legal System |
|
| PSYCH 2300 |
How the Brain Makes the Mind
There is no getting away from the brain. Everything a person does, creates, thinks, feels, believes, and experiences (including making sense of course descriptions!) depends on it. But, how? How could a three pound mass of cells and the body in which it exists see, decide, or remember, let alone navigate a busy city, play soccer, or write poetry? This course will provide students with the foundational concepts and tools they will need to begin to address these questions, providing insight into how modern cognitive neuroscientists understand the brain, how it works, and how the mind emerges from all of this. Students will learn core principles of modern human cognitive neuroscience (e.g., brain structure versus function, connectivity, reuse) and their application to cognition (e.g., action, perception, attention, memory, emotion, language, cognitive control, and consciousness). Topics in neuroanatomy, human neuroscience methods, and neurological conditions will also be covered. |
|
| PSYCH 2415 |
Introduction to Moral Psychology
This course is an introduction to the moral mind from philosophical and psychological perspectives. Many traditional philosophical problems about morality are being illuminated by current work in cognitive science. In this course, we will look at several of these problems. In each case, we will begin with a presentation of the philosophical problems, and we will proceed to examine recent empirical work on the topic. A wide range of topics will be covered, including moral judgment, agency, the self, and punishment. Full details for PSYCH 2415 - Introduction to Moral Psychology |
|
| PSYCH 2620 |
Moral Development
Why and how do humans become moral beings? And what is a moral being anyways? Humans have written about these questions for as long as they have written about any deep question. Over the past century, however, empirical scientists have joined the investigation into moral development. This course will use empirical evidence to evaluate major theories of morality and its development. In the process, we will learn about topics like: cultural differences and similarities in moral orientations, the origins of helping and harming, and the development of moral reasoning and emotions childhood to adulthood. |
|
| PSYCH 2650 |
Psychology and Law
This course explores how cognitive, social & clinical psychology are used in law. Law makes many assumptions about human psychology, and lawyers and judges regularly rely on psychological research in their cases. The course examines the psychology underlying criminal confessions; children's testimony; the insanity defense; risk assessment; judge and jury decision making; criminal punishment; constitutional law; and common law (tort, contract, and property) disputes. The course assesses the use and misuse of psychology in these subjects. |
|
| PSYCH 2800 |
Introduction to Social Psychology
Introduction to research and theory in social psychology. Topics include social influence, persuasion, and attitude change; culture, social interaction and group phenomena; evolution, altruism, and aggression; stereotyping, prejudice and discrimination; everyday reasoning and judgment. Full details for PSYCH 2800 - Introduction to Social Psychology |
|
| PSYCH 2801 |
Introduction to Social Psychology: Writing in the Majors
Writing in the Majors section of PSYCH 2800. In addition to attending all the lectures in PSYCH 2800, students will attend an additional weekly seminar and all assessment is based on writing instead of exams. This course is an introduction to research and theory in social psychology, covering the same material as in PSYCH 2800 (social influence, persuasion, and attitude change; social interaction and group phenomena; altruism and aggression; stereotyping and prejudice; everyday reasoning and judgment). Full details for PSYCH 2801 - Introduction to Social Psychology: Writing in the Majors |
|
| PSYCH 2940 |
Better Decisions for Life, Love and Money
Effective judgments and decisions are critical to success in every avenue of life. This course will explore research on the principles of sound judgment and decision making, and on the ways in which people's judgments and decisions are prone to bias and error. The course aims to improve students' critical thinking skills and to enable them to make better judgments and decisions in an increasingly complicated world. The course is taught by a team of psychologists and economists who draw on recent research in psychology and behavioral economics that can benefit the lives of students. Full details for PSYCH 2940 - Better Decisions for Life, Love and Money |
|
| PSYCH 2945 |
Data Science for Social Scientists II
This is a course on applications of data science in social science using R. We will cover fundamentals of statistical and causal inference, exploratory data analysis and data reduction, supervised learning, and recent, prominent applications of machine learning in social science. Full details for PSYCH 2945 - Data Science for Social Scientists II |
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| PSYCH 3020 |
Methods in Neuroscience
This course will expose students to a wide range of commonly used methods in neuroscience research (theory behind the method, common applications of the method, how data are collected and analyzed using the method, strengths and weaknesses of the method, etc.). The goal for students is that by the end of the course, they will be able to read and critically evaluate primary literature from many areas of neuroscience and to understand how the methods used in the study helped the researchers come to their conclusions. This course will explore methods including (but not necessarily limited to): microscopy, methods to visualize neuronal structure and function, electrophysiology, methods to measure neural activity, methods to measure and manipulate expression of genes/mRNA/protein, machine learning methods for behavioral analysis, and whole brain imaging methods in humans and non-human animals. |
|
| PSYCH 3130 |
Language and Power
In this course, we will explore how language interacts with power: how does language reflect, shape, threaten and reinforce power relations in human society? From childhood through old age, language is an ever-present source of symbolic power. We use it to develop and express our identities, to position ourselves in hierarchies, and to establish group membership and exclusion throughout life. Language shapes ourselves, our families, our social lives, and our institutions. Understanding how people use language can provide a window into hidden aspects of both individuals and the social world. |
|
| PSYCH 3150 |
Obesity and the Regulation of Body Weight
Multidisciplinary discussion of the causes, effects, and treatments of human obesity. Topics include the biopsychology of eating behavior, the genetics of obesity, the role of activity and energy metabolism, the psychosocial determinants of obesity, anorexia nervosa, therapy and its effectiveness, and social discrimination.Multidisciplinary discussion of the causes, effects, and treatments of human obesity. Topics include the biopsychology of eating behavior, the genetics of obesity, the role of activity and energy metabolism, the psychosocial determinants of obesity, anorexia nervosa, therapy and its effectiveness, and social discrimination. Full details for PSYCH 3150 - Obesity and the Regulation of Body Weight |
|
| PSYCH 3310 |
Developmental Psychopathology
Why do some children grow up well-adjusted and others do not? This course applies a developmental framework to understanding psychological disorders. We will consider the common disorders of childhood and adolescence; the individual contexts which promote risk versus resiliency; trends and trajectories in disorders over time; and the complex ethical issues associated with the diagnosis and treatment of disorders early in life. |
|
| PSYCH 3420 |
Human Perception: Application to Computer Graphics, Art, and Visual Display
Our present technology allows us to transmit and display information through a variety of media. To make the most of these media channels, it is important to consider the limitations and abilities of the human observer. The course considers a number of applied aspects of human perception with an emphasis on the display of visual information. Topics include three-dimensional display systems, color theory, spatial and temporal limitations of the visual systems, attempts at subliminal communication, and visual effects in film and television. |
|
| PSYCH 3440 |
The Development of Infants
This course examines infant development from conception through toddler hood, emphasizing the interconnected growth of the whole child—biological, cognitive, emotional, and social. Drawing on contemporary research and inclusive perspectives, students explore how culture, care giving, and individual differences shape early development. |
|
| PSYCH 3450 |
On Being Social
Humans are said to be social animals. This seminar provides an in-depth exploration of what it means to be social. Examples of topics to be covered include the fundamental need to belong and the affiliative system underlying cooperation; attachment and the proclivity to form strong affective ties throughout the life span; the biological bases of attraction and relationship formation; and the various consequences of thwarted relational needs, including the end of relationships through break-up, divorce, or death, and social alienation and chronic loneliness. We will focus on people's most intimate relationships - with partners, parents, and close friends - but will explore how our social nature is expressed in diverse ways - with unknown others, in social networks, and with political leaders, celebrities, and objects. These topics will be considered from diverse theoretical perspectives including work from social neuroscience, social, personality, developmental, cognitive, and evolutionary psychology, as well as drawing from work in communications, information science, sociology, and political science. Articles will be a combination of theoretical, review, or perspective pieces as well as empirical papers. |
|
| PSYCH 4110 | Writing, Inquiry, and Communicating in STEM |
|
| PSYCH 4220 | The Psychology of Misinformation |
|
| PSYCH 4230 |
Navigation, Memory, and Context: What Does the Hippocampus Do?
Although the hippocampus has been the subject of intense scrutiny for nearly 50 years, there remains considerable disagreement about functional contributions the hippocampus makes to learning and memory process. This course will examine the diverse functions attributed to the hippocampus with an eye toward integrating the differing viewpoints in the literature. After a brief historical overview, students will discuss cutting-edge literature on the hippocampal role in spatial navigation, learning, and memory, and context processing. Full details for PSYCH 4230 - Navigation, Memory, and Context: What Does the Hippocampus Do? |
|
| PSYCH 4360 |
Possibility and Imagination
This course will cover the psychology of imagination, possibility, and fiction looking across multiple disciplines including cognitive science, philosophy, neuroscience, and more. |
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| PSYCH 4510 | Research Seminar on the Relational Mind |
|
| PSYCH 4560 |
Black Girlhood Studies: Rememory, Representation, and Re-Imagination
How has history shaped our notion of Black girlhood? What is our collective understanding of Black girlhood? How do we see and understand Black girls? Black Girlhood Studies is a multidisciplinary field that draws on education, literature, psychological, and sociological perspectives as tools to see and honor Black girls' lived experiences. In this seminar course, we will use a mixture of lectures and facilitated discussions to provide an overview of Black girlhood as it relates to historical and current-day social, political, and cultural constructions of Black girlhood within and beyond the United States. We will also interrogate how Black girls deconstruct and interrupt these social constructions by engaging in scholarly works, popular press articles, poetry, music, film, and novels. Throughout the course, we will make space to imagine a world where Black girls' ways of knowing, being, and experiencing the world are honored. Full details for PSYCH 4560 - Black Girlhood Studies: Rememory, Representation, and Re-Imagination |
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| PSYCH 4600 |
Neural Representations
Neurons generate action potentials. Brains underlie feeding, fighting, fleeing, and reproduction, also navigation, attention, sociality, art, and science. What about the middle part? This advanced seminar course examines the construction and transformations of neural representations that enable animals to comprehend and interact effectively with their environments. The curriculum emphasizes integration across levels of analysis and organization, including cellular and synaptic physiology, the emergent properties of networks, energy and information management, quantitative modeling, cognitive algorithms, and adaptive behavioral outcomes. |
|
| PSYCH 4700 |
Undergraduate Research in Psychology
Practice in planning, conducting, and reporting independent laboratory, field, and/or library research. Full details for PSYCH 4700 - Undergraduate Research in Psychology |
|
| PSYCH 4710 |
Advanced Undergraduate Research in Psychology
Advanced experience in planning, conducting, and reporting independent laboratory, field, and/or library research. One, and preferably two, semesters of PSYCH 4700 is required. The research should be more independent and/or involve more demanding technical skills than that carried out in PSYCH 4700. Full details for PSYCH 4710 - Advanced Undergraduate Research in Psychology |
|
| PSYCH 4790 |
Psychology of Purity
Any moral and religious systems tell us to keep a “pure heart,” and that immoral acts “pollute” our souls. We dislike dirty plays and dirty players in sports, and we keep our children away from dirty movies. We are also motivated to maintain purity in the less metaphorical sense—most cultures have norms about keeping bodies and living spaces clean. We even have an emotion—disgust—that seems especially attuned to certain kinds of dirtiness (such as bodily fluids and rotten food). The concept of purity, then, appears to be a deep aspect of human psychology—from the basic motivation to maintain physical purity, to the metaphors of purity and cleanliness that feature heavily in morality and religion across cultures. In this course we will look at the psychology of purity by reading widely on the topic, including historical, religious, anthropological, and psychological topics that center on purity in both the physical and moral/spiritual sense. Our aim will be to understand how this basic notion of pure/impure or clean/dirty has come to shape our psychology and our culture. |
|
| PSYCH 4800 |
Social Psychology of Race and Racism
The human mind has a fundamental need to create categories. In this course we will examine how historical, developmental, cognitive, and motivational factors give rise to the construction of the social category race in the United States. We will also consider how racial group membership - and its intersections with other group memberships - can profoundly influence one's experience of the world and each other. To understand the construct of race and its consequences we will perform close reading and critical analysis of theoretical and empirical work in social psychology. As social psychologists, we are uniquely poised to answer why it is we are so drawn to categorizing people based on race, how our minds construct these categorizations, and what the downstream consequences of these categorizations are - ultimately guiding our ability to intervene. The aims of the course are to enhance students' ability to evaluate and analyze existing theory and research and to apply these readings to aid understanding of real world discrimination, disparities, and violence. Full details for PSYCH 4800 - Social Psychology of Race and Racism |
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| PSYCH 4860 | Special Topics in Social Psychology |
|
| PSYCH 4940 |
Moral Psychology in Action
Moral Psychology in Action is an applied psychology course for students who want to make a difference in the world through ethical leadership and positive contributions in organizations, and who are drawn to scholarly work on psychology, ethics, and morality. The course is experiential and takes place mostly outside the classroom through students' individualized partnerships in community organizations, businesses, and institutions. Learning outcomes include enhanced critical reflection, intercultural competence, ethical practice, and the practice of applied moral psychology research methods. |
|
| PSYCH 6000 |
General Research Seminar
This course is designed to introduce first-year graduates to the Psychology Department faculty through a weekly series of presentations of current research. |
|
| PSYCH 6020 |
Methods in Neuroscience
This course will expose students to a wide range of commonly used methods in neuroscience research (theory behind the method, common applications of the method, how data are collected and analyzed using the method, strengths and weaknesses of the method, etc.). The goal for students is that by the end of the course, they will be able to read and critically evaluate primary literature from many areas of neuroscience and to understand how the methods used in the study helped the researchers come to their conclusions. This course will explore methods including (but not necessarily limited to): microscopy, methods to visualize neuronal structure and function, electrophysiology, methods to neural activity, methods to measure and manipulate expression of genes/mRNA/protein, machine learning methods for behavioral analysis, and whole brain imaging methods in humans and non-human animals. |
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| PSYCH 6110 | Writing, Inquiry, and communicating in STEM |
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| PSYCH 6225 |
Special Topics in Social Psychology
This course will cover special topics related to belief, metacognition, and reasoning. Full details for PSYCH 6225 - Special Topics in Social Psychology |
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| PSYCH 6226 |
Special Topics in Quantitative Psychology
This course is offered to graduate students and focuses on discussion of topics in quantitative methods, with an emphasis on current books. Each semester students will work through a contemporary advanced monograph on methods. We will be using social annotation software to prepare for readings and then have class discussion of chapters. There will be a special emphasis on causal inference and foundational research methods. Full details for PSYCH 6226 - Special Topics in Quantitative Psychology |
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| PSYCH 6230 |
Navigation, Memory, and Context: What Does the Hippocampus Do?
Although the hippocampus has been the subject of intense scrutiny for nearly 50 years, there remains considerable disagreement about functional contributions the hippocampus makes to learning and memory process. This seminar will examine the diverse functions attributed to the hippocampus with an eye toward integrating the differing viewpoints in the literature. After a brief historical overview, students will discuss cutting-edge literature on the hippocampal role in spatial navigation, learning, and memory, and context processing. Full details for PSYCH 6230 - Navigation, Memory, and Context: What Does the Hippocampus Do? |
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| PSYCH 6271 |
Topics in Biopsychology
Course explores current issues in Psychology. Topics vary by section. |
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| PSYCH 6315 |
Moral Change
Morality changes constantly. What is wrong in one situation is right in another. Children acquire new moral principles as they grow older. And over human history, societies have transformed their views on how to treat its members. How is moral change possible? And what is its direction-if it has one? In this seminar, we will engage with diverse perspectives on moral change. Readings will come from developmental, cognitive, and social psychological research on morality, as well as philosophy, history, and other related fields. Students will participate in weekly discussions, give a class presentation, and submit a final paper. |
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| PSYCH 6360 |
Possibility and Imagination
This course will cover the psychology of imagination, possibility, and fiction looking across multiple disciplines including cognitive science, philosophy, neuroscience, and more. |
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| PSYCH 6370 |
Special Topics in Moral Psychology
This course examines how morality, rules, their intersection, and related topics shape human thought and behavior. We will investigate why rules exist, what influences how people make moral judgments about those who break rules (and those who follow them), how rules relate to social institutions, and more. Drawing on research from philosophy, social, cognitive, and moral psychology, we will explore questions about moral judgment, norm enforcement, and more. Our discussions will also consider broader contexts—drawing on perspectives from philosophy, law, political science, and evolutionary biology to examine rules not only as psychological phenomena but as central features of institutions and social life. Full details for PSYCH 6370 - Special Topics in Moral Psychology |
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| PSYCH 6450 | On Being Social |
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| PSYCH 6510 | Research Seminar on the Relational Mind |
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| PSYCH 6600 |
Neural Representations
Neurons generate action potentials. Brains underlie feeding, fighting, fleeing, and reproduction, also navigation, attention, sociality, art, and science. What about the middle part? This advanced seminar course examines the construction of neural circuits and systems that enable achievement of behavioral goals. The curriculum emphasizes integration across levels of analysis and organizations, including cellular and synaptic physiology, the emergent properties of networks, energy and information management, quantitative modeling, cognitive algorithm, and adaptive behavioral outcomes. |
|
| PSYCH 6655 |
Topics in Cognition
In this journal-club-style class we will read and discuss papers exploring a content-area in Cognition. For Spring 2026, readings will focus on relationships between language and thought (i.e., Linguistic Relativity). Do the languages we speak shape the way we think? If so, do people who speak different languages think differently? These seemingly innocent questions were considered taboo by scientists and philosophers throughout much of the 20th century. Today, however, these questions are the subject of productive scientific inquiry, and ongoing experiments are producing answers that rewrite the story of language, culture, and the human mind. |
|
| PSYCH 6790 |
Psychology of Purity
Any moral and religious systems tell us to keep a “pure heart,” and that immoral acts “pollute” our souls. We dislike dirty plays and dirty players in sports, and we keep our children away from dirty movies. We are also motivated to maintain purity in the less metaphorical sense—most cultures have norms about keeping bodies and living spaces clean. We even have an emotion—disgust—that seems especially attuned to certain kinds of dirtiness (such as bodily fluids and rotten food). The concept of purity, then, appears to be a deep aspect of human psychology—from the basic motivation to maintain physical purity, to the metaphors of purity and cleanliness that feature heavily in morality and religion across cultures. In this course we will look at the psychology of purity by reading widely on the topic, including historical, religious, anthropological, and psychological topics that center on purity in both the physical and moral/spiritual sense. Our aim will be to understand how this basic notion of pure/impure or clean/dirty has come to shape our psychology and our culture. |
|
| PSYCH 6800 |
Social Psychology of Race and Racism
The human mind has a fundamental need to create categories. In this course we will examine how historical, developmental, cognitive, and motivational factors give rise to the construction of the social category of race in the United States. We wll also consider how racial group membership - and its intersections with other group memberships - can profoundly influence one's experience of the world and each other. To understand the construct of race and its consequences we will perform close reading and critical analysis of theoretical and empirical work in social psychology. Full details for PSYCH 6800 - Social Psychology of Race and Racism |
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| PSYCH 6860 | Special Topics in Social Psychology |
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| PSYCH 7000 |
Research in Biopsychology
A graduate research seminar in biopsychology. |
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| PSYCH 7090 |
Developmental Psychology
One of four introductory courses in cognition and perception. A comprehensive introduction to current thinking and research in developmental psychology that approaches problems from both psychobiological and cognitive perspectives. We will use a comparative approach to assess principles of development change. The course focuses on the development of perception, action, cognition, language, and social understanding in infancy and early childhood. |
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| PSYCH 7100 |
Research in Human Experimental Psychology
A graduate research seminar in human experimental psychology. Full details for PSYCH 7100 - Research in Human Experimental Psychology |
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| PSYCH 7200 |
Research in Social Psychology and Personality
A graduate research seminar in social psychology and personality. Full details for PSYCH 7200 - Research in Social Psychology and Personality |
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| PSYCH 7760 |
Proseminar in Social Psychology II
Second semester of a year-long discussion-seminar course intended to give graduate students an in-depth understanding of current research and theory in social psychology. Emphasizes social cognition, but other topics, such as group dynamics, social influence, moral psychology and emotional experience are covered. Full details for PSYCH 7760 - Proseminar in Social Psychology II |
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| PSYCH 9000 |
Doctoral Thesis Research in Biopsychology
A graduate seminar on doctoral thesis research in biopsychology. Full details for PSYCH 9000 - Doctoral Thesis Research in Biopsychology |
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| PSYCH 9100 |
Doctoral Thesis Research in Human Experimental Psychology
A graduate seminar on doctoral thesis research in human experimental psychology. Full details for PSYCH 9100 - Doctoral Thesis Research in Human Experimental Psychology |
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| PSYCH 9200 |
Doctoral Thesis Research in Social Psychology and Personality
A graduate seminar on doctoral thesis research in social psychology and personality. Full details for PSYCH 9200 - Doctoral Thesis Research in Social Psychology and Personality |
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| HD 2090 |
Developmental Psychology
A comprehensive introduction to current thinking and research in developmental psychology that approaches topics from both psychobiological and cognitive perspectives. We will use a comparative approach to assess principles of development change. The course focuses on the development of perception, action, cognition, language, and social understanding in infancy and early childhood. |
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| HD 2170 |
Adolescence and Emerging Adulthood
HD 2170 introduces students to the major theoretical perspectives, research findings, research methods, applications, and controversies in the study of human development during the period of adolescence and the transition to emerging adulthood. The main focus is on individual development, but we view this development from an interdisciplinary perspective. The emphasis in the course is on psychological development, but we also will draw on related fields, such as sociology, anthropology, biology, neuroscience, and education. Within psychology, we will be looking at adolescence and emerging adulthood from the standpoints of developmental, cognitive, social, personality, clinical, and biological psychology. There will be some use of statistics in the course, but sophisticated knowledge of statistics is not required. This is a second-level course, so the emphasis is on creative, analytical, practical, and wise understanding and application of concepts of development. Full details for HD 2170 - Adolescence and Emerging Adulthood |
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| HD 2310 |
How the Brain Makes the Mind
There is no getting away from the brain. Everything a person does, creates, thinks, feels, believes, and experiences (including making sense of course descriptions!) depends on it. But, how? How could a three pound mass of cells and the body in which it exists see, decide, or remember, let alone navigate a busy city, play soccer, or write poetry? This course will provide students with the foundational concepts and tools they will need to begin to address these questions, providing insight into how modern cognitive neuroscientists understand the brain, how it works, and how the mind emerges from all of this. Students will learn core principles of modern human cognitive neuroscience (e.g., brain structure versus function, connectivity, reuse) and their application to cognition (e.g., action, perception, attention, memory, emotion, language, cognitive control, and consciousness). Topics in neuroanatomy, human neuroscience methods, and neurological conditions will also be covered. |
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| HD 2510 |
Social Gerontology: Aging and the Life Course
Analyzes the social aspects of aging in contemporary American society from a life course perspective. Topics include (1) an introduction to the field of gerontology, its history, theories, and research methods; (2) a brief overview of the physiological and psychological changes that accompany aging; (3) an analysis of the contexts (e.g., family, friends, social support, employment, volunteer work) in which individual aging occurs, including differences of gender, ethnicity, and social class; and (4) the influences of society on the aging individual. Full details for HD 2510 - Social Gerontology: Aging and the Life Course |
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| HD 2620 |
Moral Development
Why and how do humans become moral beings? And what is a moral being anyways? Humans have written about these questions for as long as they have written about any deep question. Over the past century, however, empirical scientists have joined the investigation into moral development. This course will use empirical evidence to evaluate major theories of morality and its development. In the process, we will learn about topics like: cultural differences and similarities in moral orientations, the origins of helping and harming, and the development of moral reasoning and emotions childhood to adulthood. |
|
| HD 2650 |
Psychology and Law
This course explores how cognitive, social & clinical psychology are used in law. Law makes many assumptions about human psychology, and lawyers and judges regularly rely on psychological research in their cases. The course examines the psychology underlying criminal confessions; children's testimony; the insanity defense; risk assessment; judge and jury decision making; criminal punishment; constitutional law; and common law (tort, contract, and property) disputes. The course assesses the use and misuse of psychology in these subjects. |
|
| HD 2810 |
Introduction to Social Psychology
Introduction to research and theory in social psychology. Topics include social influence, persuasion, and attitude change; culture, social interaction and group phenomena; evolution, altruism, and aggression; stereotyping, prejudice and discrimination; everyday reasoning and judgment. Full details for HD 2810 - Introduction to Social Psychology |
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| HD 2940 |
Data Science for Social Scientists II
This is a course on applications of data science in social science using R. We will cover fundamentals of statistical and causal inference, exploratory data analysis and data reduction, supervised learning, and recent, prominent applications of machine learning in social science. Full details for HD 2940 - Data Science for Social Scientists II |
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| HD 3150 |
Language and Power
In this course, we will explore how language interacts with power: how does language reflect, shape, threaten and reinforce power relations in human society? From childhood through old age, language is an ever-present source of symbolic power. We use it to develop and express our identities, to position ourselves in hierarchies, and to establish group membership and exclusion throughout life. Language shapes ourselves, our families, our social lives, and our institutions. Understanding how people use language can provide a window into hidden aspects of both individuals and the social world. |
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| HD 3290 |
Self-regulation Across the Life Span
Covers the science of self-regulation and its development over the human life span. After providing an overview of historical perspectives, the class will focus on contemporary research including homeostasis in bodily systems, self-control and regulation, goal setting, economic perspectives, as well as the role of emotions and personality. Full details for HD 3290 - Self-regulation Across the Life Span |
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| HD 3300 |
Developmental Psychopathology
Why do some children grow up well-adjusted and others do not? This course applies a developmental framework to understanding psychological disorders. We will consider the common disorders of childhood and adolescence; the individual contexts which promote risk versus resiliency; trends and trajectories in disorders over time; and the complex ethical issues associated with the diagnosis and treatment of disorders early in life. |
|
| HD 3320 |
Gender and Psychopathology
This course will examine the ways in which sex and gender impact the expression of severe psychopathology. We will try to understand these relationships using different levels of analysis. This will involve an exploration of biological, psychological, cognitive, and social factors associated with sex and gender as they influence the epidemiology, phenomenology, etiology, diagnosis, and course of illness in major forms of psychopathology: specifically, schizophrenia, major affective illness, anxiety disorders, eating disorders, and personality disorders. We will examine these topics through the frameworks of psychological science, feminism, and intersectionality, and attempt to integrate the offerings of each, to generate a nuanced understanding of mental illness. |
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| HD 3440 |
The Development of Infants
This course examines infant development from conception through toddler hood, emphasizing the interconnected growth of the whole child—biological, cognitive, emotional, and social. Drawing on contemporary research and inclusive perspectives, students explore how culture, care giving, and individual differences shape early development. |
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| HD 3455 |
On Being Social
Humans are said to be social animals. This seminar provides an in-depth exploration of what it means to be social. Examples of topics to be covered include the fundamental need to belong and the affiliative system underlying cooperation; attachment and the proclivity to form strong affective ties throughout the life span; the biological bases of attraction and relationship formation; and the various consequences of thwarted relational needs, including the end of relationships through break-up, divorce, or death, and social alienation and chronic loneliness. We will focus on people's most intimate relationships - with partners, parents, and close friends - but will explore how our social nature is expressed in diverse ways - with unknown others, in social networks, and with political leaders, celebrities, and objects. These topics will be considered from diverse theoretical perspectives including work from social neuroscience, social, personality, developmental, cognitive, and evolutionary psychology, as well as drawing from work in communications, information science, sociology, and political science. Articles will be a combination of theoretical, review, or perspective pieces as well as empirical papers. |
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| HD 3530 |
Risk and Opportunity Factors in Childhood and Adolescence
This advanced active-learning class will focus on theories and empirical findings concerning risky decision making in childhood, adolescence, and adulthood. The material will be scholarly and intellectually challenging. We will engage active-learning strategies such as problem-based learning, case studies, group projects, and extended discussions. The course draws on multiple disciplines, such as psychology, economics, neuroscience, and information sciences (e.g., AI). If your main interest is in positive psychology, youth development applications, or social factors such as poverty, there are other excellent courses in Human Development focusing on those topics. Class sessions will consist of lectures covering the theoretical background, key topics and discussion designed to deepen understanding and explore possible real-life applications in law, medicine, and public health. Full details for HD 3530 - Risk and Opportunity Factors in Childhood and Adolescence |
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| HD 3620 |
Human Bonding
Covers the science of interpersonal relationships. Examines the basic nature of human affectional bonds, including their functions and dynamics. Covers such topics as interpersonal attraction and mate selection, intimacy and commitment, love and sex, jealousy and loneliness, the neurobiology of affiliation and attachment, and the role of relationships in physical and psychological health. |
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| HD 4000 |
Directed Readings
For study that predominantly involves library research and independent study. |
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| HD 4010 |
Empirical Research
For study that predominantly involves data collection and analysis or laboratory or studio projects. |
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| HD 4020 |
Supervised Fieldwork
For study that involves both responsible participation in a community setting and reflection on that experience through discussion, reading, and writing. Academic credit is awarded for this integration of theory and practice. |
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| HD 4030 |
Teaching Assistantship
For study that includes assisting faculty with instruction. |
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| HD 4110 |
Advanced Seminar in Psychopathology
This course provides an overview to the theory, concepts, and controversies underlying common psychological disorders, as well as an introduction to transdiagnostic perspectives on mental health. Full details for HD 4110 - Advanced Seminar in Psychopathology |
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| HD 4240 |
Stress, Emotion, and Health
This undergraduate seminar will focus on contemporary issues in stress and affective science and their implications for mental and physical health. Through reading, writing, and discussion, students will analyze theoretical approaches to the measurement of stress, emotions, and health. Additionally, we will consider issues of individual differences in stress responsivity, including the concepts of risks and resilience, positive health, and flourishing. |
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| HD 4310 |
Mind, Self, and Emotion
Offered to students who are currently conducting research or planning to do research in the near future on one of the three topics-memory, self, or emotion. The course examines current data and theories concerning the topics from a variety of perspectives and at multiple levels of analysis, particularly focusing on the interconnections among these fields of inquiry. The scale of observation is viewed as occurring within the person (brain mechanisms, including genetics), at the level of the person (content-goals, beliefs, desires, etc.), and between persons (relationships and group interaction-including culture). |
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| HD 4560 |
Black Girlhood Studies: Rememory, Representation, and Re-Imagination
How has history shaped our notion of Black girlhood? What is our collective understanding of Black girlhood? How do we see and understand Black girls? Black Girlhood Studies is a multidisciplinary field that draws on education, literature, psychological, and sociological perspectives as tools to see and honor Black girls' lived experiences. In this seminar course, we will use a mixture of lectures and facilitated discussions to provide an overview of Black girlhood as it relates to historical and current-day social, political, and cultural constructions of Black girlhood within and beyond the United States. We will also interrogate how Black girls deconstruct and interrupt these social constructions by engaging in scholarly works, popular press articles, poetry, music, film, and novels. Throughout the course, we will make space to imagine a world where Black girls' ways of knowing, being, and experiencing the world are honored. Full details for HD 4560 - Black Girlhood Studies: Rememory, Representation, and Re-Imagination |
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| HD 4600 |
Professional Development in Geriatric and Palliative Research
This course serves as a companion class for students admitted to the Geriatric Palliative Research Immersion Program who are engaged in concurrent research with remote mentors at Weill Cornell Medicine. Students in this course will learn about research methods, techniques, and practices in geriatric and palliative settings and engage with various providers and stakeholders in the field. Full details for HD 4600 - Professional Development in Geriatric and Palliative Research |
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| HD 4650 | Neuroimaging for Behavioral Syndromes |
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| HD 4720 |
Current Research in Emotion, Cognition, and Brain
The course will cover advanced topics in research on the emotions from central neural and peripheral physiological perspectives, with an emphasis with how emotions shape different aspects of cognition and behavior. Full details for HD 4720 - Current Research in Emotion, Cognition, and Brain |
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| HD 4765 |
How to Think Like a Scientist
What does it mean to think like a scientist? This course will explore the structure of scientific thinking, from its philosophical foundations through current efforts to make science fair and replicable. The thought processes that underlie the methods used in psychology and neuroscience are rarely made explicit in courses on statistics and research methods - understanding these thought processes can make us better scientists and sharper thinkers. |
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| HD 4850 |
Professional Development in Translational Research
As a supplement to their immersive learning experience working on faculty research projects, students in this course will engage with actors and ideas from across the youth development research and practice communities, learn about research methods and dissemination to various audiences, and begin to see the world from a translational research perspective. Full details for HD 4850 - Professional Development in Translational Research |
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| HD 4860 |
Nearest Neighbor
As a supplement to their immersive learning experience working on translational research projects led by CHE faculty, and building on their experience in HD4850 (Professional Development in Translational Research), this course will provide opportunities for students to put their learning into practice by proposing and implementing a translational research project in collaboration with community partners. |
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| HD 4940 |
Moral Psychology in Action
Moral Psychology in Action is an applied psychology course for students who want to make a difference in the world through ethical leadership and positive contributions in organizations, and who are drawn to scholarly work on psychology, ethics, and morality. The course is experiential and takes place mostly outside the classroom through students' individualized partnerships in community organizations, businesses, and institutions. Learning outcomes include enhanced critical reflection, intercultural competence, ethical practice, and the practice of applied moral psychology research methods. |
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| HD 4990 |
Senior Honors Thesis
This course is for students doing research as part of the Honors Program in Human Development. |
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| HD 6200 |
First-Year Proseminar in Human Development
Designed as an orientation to the department and the university. Activities include attendance at research presentations, visits to departmental research laboratories, relevant informational sessions (e.g., Institutional Review Board for Human Participants, proposal writing), and guidance in preparing a public research presentation to be made at the end of spring semester. Full details for HD 6200 - First-Year Proseminar in Human Development |
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| HD 6210 |
Seminar on Autobiographical Memory
This graduate seminar is designed to give an overview as well as in-depth analysis of topics related to autobiographical memory and its development. Readings focus heavily on current theories and empirical research on a wide range of topics including childhood amnesia, reminiscence bump, emotion and memory, memory accuracy, development and disruption, neurological perspectives, memory functions, and memory across cultures. Full details for HD 6210 - Seminar on Autobiographical Memory |
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| HD 6290 |
The Structure and Dynamics of Self-Regulation
Takes an in-depth look at structural and dynamic aspects of self-regulation with particular emphasis on empirical approaches and methodological challenges. Students will identify areas of overlap with their own interests and develop concrete ideas of how a self-regulatory angle can enrich their research ideas or broaden their professional perspective. Full details for HD 6290 - The Structure and Dynamics of Self-Regulation |
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| HD 6315 |
Moral Change
Morality changes constantly. What is wrong in one situation is right in another. Children acquire new moral principles as they grow older. And over human history, societies have transformed their views on how to treat its members. How is moral change possible? And what is its direction-if it has one? In this seminar, we will engage with diverse perspectives on moral change. Readings will come from developmental, cognitive, and social psychological research on morality, as well as philosophy, history, and other related fields. Students will participate in weekly discussions, give a class presentation, and submit a final paper. |
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| HD 6560 |
Black Girlhood Studies: Rememory, Representation, and Re-Imagination
How has history shaped our notion of Black girlhood? What is our collective understanding of Black girlhood? How do we see and understand Black girls? Black Girlhood Studies is a multidisciplinary field that draws on education, literature, psychological, and sociological perspectives as tools to see and honor Black girls' lived experiences. In this graduate-level seminar course, we will systematically explore historical and contemporary social, political, and cultural constructions of Black girlhood within and beyond the United States. We will also interrogate how Black girls deconstruct and interrupt these social constructions by engaging in scholarly works, popular press articles, poetry, music, film, and novels. Throughout the course, we will make space to imagine a world where Black girls' ways of knowing, being, and experiencing the world are honored. Full details for HD 6560 - Black Girlhood Studies: Rememory, Representation, and Re-Imagination |
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| HD 6570 |
Special Topics in Community Psychology: Critical Methodologies and Epistemic Justice
How do our ways of knowing shape our research? What methodological tools can support us in working alongside community members in equitable and humanizing ways? How might research be used as a tool for creating spaces and methods for healing, re-imagining, and transforming our communities? In this interdisciplinary graduate-level seminar, we will use readings, facilitated discussions, and workshops to critically examine and interrogate (a) epistemological and theoretical foundations of critical psychological research, (b) qualitative methodological strategies for studying alongside communities, and (c) practical applications for re-imagining psychological science. Throughout the course, we will reflect on our positioning as researchers and consider ethical dilemmas in community-engaged work. |
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| HD 6640 |
The Science and Politics of Gender in the Academy
Designed for graduate students and select seniors who are interested in graduate study in scientific disciplines that focus on human behavior and social interaction. The purpose of the seminar is examine the science and politics in an academic career. The seminar has three goals: 1) to promote discussion, debate, and an eventual understanding of sociopolitical aspects of the academy, 2) to provide members with an opportunity to summon, integrate, and apply insights that they have acquired through readings and discussion as they analyze arguments from the standpoint of multiple social sciences, and 3) to integrate scholarship across disciplinary lines. Full details for HD 6640 - The Science and Politics of Gender in the Academy |
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| HD 6655 | Neuroimaging for Behavioral Syndromes |
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| HD 6690 |
The Nature and Function of Affectional Bonds
This course will examine human bonding primarily from a psychological perspective, drawing on empirical and theoretical work from the fields of developmental, clinical, evolutionary, cognitive, personality, and social psychology, and secondarily from ethology, anthropology, sociology, and neurobiology. The central goal of the course is to define and explain basic structure, functions, dynamics, and formation of human affectional bonds, especially those of the attachment and mating variety. Full details for HD 6690 - The Nature and Function of Affectional Bonds |
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| HD 6720 |
Current Research in Emotion, Cognition and Brain
The course will cover advanced topics in research on the emotions from central neural and peripheral physiological perspectives, with an emphasis with how emotions shape different aspects of cognition and behavior. Full details for HD 6720 - Current Research in Emotion, Cognition and Brain |
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| HD 6820 | Proseminar in Affective and Clinical Science II |
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| HD 7000 |
Directed Readings
For study that predominantly involves library research and independent study. |
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| HD 7010 |
Empirical Research
For study that predominantly involves collection and analysis of research data. |
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| HD 8990 |
Master's Thesis and Research
This course is for Master's students doing research for their Master's thesis. |
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| HD 9990 |
Doctoral Thesis and Research
This course is for Ph.D. students doing research for their doctoral thesis. |
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