
1044 East Hall
764-2580
Professor Patricia Y. Gurin, Chair
May be elected as a departmental concentration program in
Psychology or Psychology
as a Natural Science
Professors
Kenneth Adams, (Clinical) Human neuropsychology, medical psychology, professional education, statistics/ measurement
Joseph B. Adelson, (Clinical) Adult psychopathology, adolescence
Toni Antonucci, (Developmental) Developmental psychology, aging and socialization
Oscar A. Barbarin, (Clinical) Emotional development of African-American children
Stanley Berent, (Clinical/Biopsychology) Clinical and research neuropsychology
Kent Berridge, (Biopsychology) Motivation and sensorimotor integration
Eugene Burnstein, (Social) Group decision and group polarization
David Buss, (Personality) Interpersonal behavior, evolutionary psychology, human mate selection
Charles M. Butter, (Biopsychology/Cognition and Perception) Neural mechanisms of perception, learning in monkeys and humans
Albert C. Cain, (Clinical) Psychopathology of childhood, bereavement
Jennifer Crocker, (Social)
Jacquelynne Eccles, (Developmental) Social cognition, achievement, motivation
Phoebe Ellsworth, (Social) Psychology of emotion, psychology and law
Irene Fast, (Clinical) Gender identity development, borderline personality disorders
Susan Gelman, (Cognition and Perception/Developmental) Cognitive development, language acquisition
Daniel G. Green, (Biopsychology/Cognition and Perception) Psychophysics, neurophysiology of the eye
Patricia Y. Gurin, (Personality/Social) Intergroup relations, social change
John W. Hagen, (Developmental) Cognitive development, selective attention, memory
Lois W. Hoffman, (Developmental) Parent-child relationship, the family
John Holland, (Cognition and Perception) Cognitive processes using mathematical models and computer simulation
Rowell Huesmann, (Social) Aggressive Behavior, Media effects on behavior, Formal models of social behavior, Computer simulation and psychometrics
James S. Jackson, (Social, Cognition and Perception) Survey methodology; mental health, cultural influences
John Jonides, (Cognition and Perception) Perception and cognition, memory, selective attention
Neil M. Kalter, (Clinical) Emotional disturbance and children, impact of divorce
Rachel Kaplan, (General) Environmental psychology, participation, research methods
Stephen Kaplan, (General/Cognition and Perception) Environmental preference, cognitive mapping
Donald R. Kinder, (Social) American government, methods, public policy and administration
Sylvan Kornblum, (Cognition and Perception) Mental processes underlying human movement
Martin Maehr, (Education/Psychology) Motivation and personal achievement; social psychology of education
Melvin Manis, (Social/Personality) Cognition, experimental study of communication
Martin Mayman, (Clinical) Research instruments for psychoanalytic concepts
Vonnie C. McLoyd, (Developmental) Cultural determinants of children's play
David E. Meyer, (Cognition and Perception) Human memory, cognition, perception, psycholinguistics
David B. Moody, (Biopsychology/Cognition and Perception) Operant conditioning, psychophysics
Charles G. Morris, (Personality/General) Personality structure, shyness
Richard E. Nisbett, (Social/Cognition and Perception/Personality) Inference, judgment and reasoning
Gary M. Olson, (Cognition and Perception/Developmental) Cognitive psychology, psycholinguistics
Judith Olson, (Cognition and Perception) Human-computer interaction, applied cognition
Robert G. Pachella, (Cognition and Perception) Cognitive psychology, information processing, perception
Denise Park, (Cognition and Perception)
Scott G. Paris, (Developmental/Education & Psychology) Cognitive development
Marion Perlmutter, (Developmental) Memory, forgetting, social interactions, computer skills in children and the elderly
Christopher Peterson, (Clinical) Depression, physical health and illness, explanatory style, personal control
Richard H. Price, (Organizational) Assessment of social environments
Terry E. Robinson, (Biopsychology) Neural correlates of behavior
George C. Rosenwald, (Clinical/Personality) Personality theory, life history
Arnold Sameroff, (Developmental) Developmental psychopathology, family processes and the intergenerational transmission of psychopathology
Norbert Schwarz, (Social) Social Cognition, in particular the interplay of affect and cognition in social judgment and conversational aspects of cognitive processes, Applications of cognitive psychology on methodological issues of survey research
Marilyn Shatz, (Developmental/Cognition and Perception) Cognitive, linguistic development
Howard Shevrin, (Clinical) Unconscious processes, diagnostic and psychological tests
Edward E. Smith, (Cognition and Perception) Concepts and categorization, induction and reasoning
Barbara Smuts, (Biopsychology) Field research on the behavior and ecology of free living primates, especially the evolution and development of female social relationships
Harold W. Stevenson, (Developmental/ Cognition and Perception) Learning, cognitive development
Abigail Stewart, (Personality) Women's lives, life transitions, sex roles, self-achievement, women's motivation
Joseph Veroff, (Social/Personality) Personality-role interaction
Karl Weick, (Organizational) Organizational psychology
Henry M. Wellman, (Developmental) Cognitive development, early memory
David Winter, (Personality) Motivation, power, effects of higher education, political psychology, economic change
Howard M. Wolowitz, (Clinical) Adult psychotherapy experiences
James H. Woods, (Biopsychology) Behavioral pharmacology, drug dependence
J. Frank Yates, (Cognition and Perception) Decision processes; evaluation, decision models
Robert Zucker, (Clinical)
Associate Professors
Jill Becker, (Biopsychology) Brain tissue transplantation, plasticity and development of neural activity
Eric A. Bermann, (Clinical) Family therapy; child abuse, neglect
Linas Bieliauskas (Clinical) Neuropsychology
Henry A. (Gus) Buchtel, (Clinical/Biopsychology) Brain studies and behavior in humans
Jane Dutton, (Organizational) Strategic decision making; organizational response to family issues
Bruno Giordani, (Clinical) Epilepsy, neuropsychology
Lorraine Gutierrez, (General)
James L. Hilton, (Social) Social interaction process, attribution theory, strategic self presentation
Warren G. Holmes, (Biopsychology) Evolutionary biology, evolution of social behavior
David E. Kieras, (Cognition and Perception) Cognitive psychology, human-computer interaction, artificial intelligence
Randy Larsen, (Personality) Emotion and personality; physiological bases of personality
Theresa Lee, (Biopsychology) Biological rhythms
Robert K. Lindsay, (Cognition and Perception) Cognitive psychology, artificial intelligence
Carol Mowbray, (Clinical) Mental Health Services research, psychiatric rehabilitation, program evaluation, homelessness and women's mental health
Donna Nagata, (Clinical) Ethnic and cultural issues in mental health; Japanese-Americans and the psychosocial consequences of the WWII internment
Susan Nolen-Hoeksema, (Personality)
Sheryl Olson, (Clinical) Child and family psychopathology
Lance Sandelands, (Organizational) Motivation and affect; division of labor in social organizations
Colleen Seifert, (Cognition and Perception) Cognitive modeling; artificial intelligence
Steven Trieweiler, (Clinical) Interpersonal event perception and memory, particularly as realized in psychotherapeutic narrative
Assistant Professors
Rosario Ceballo, (Clinical)
Thomas Finholt, (Organizational) Information technology and organizational behavior, organizational communication
Barbara Fredrickson, (Social)
William Gehring, (Cognition & Perception)
Sandra Graham-Bermann, (Clinical) Developmental psychopathology; gender and clinical theory
Andrea Hunter, (Personality) Exploring linkages between families, social structure, and culture, and their impact on the life course with specific focus on African-Americans
Cheryl King, (Clinical)
Fiona Lee, (Organizational)
Stephen Maren, (Biopsychology)
Jacqueline Mattis, (Clinical)
Jeffrey Parker, (Clinical/Developmental) Children's social relationships with peers
Thad Polk, (Cognition and Perception)
Patricia Reuter-Lorenz, (Cognition and Perception) Brain mechanics of visual attention and spatial orienting
Richard Saavedra (Organizational) Social influence in work groups; the role of emotion in effectiveness; the design of work teams
Brenda Volling, (Developmental) Socioemotional development; infant-parent attachment; family relationships in infancy, especially fathering
Jun Zhang, (Cognition and Perception) Visual perception and psychophysics; computational vision
Lecturers
Terrence Bazzett, (Biopsychology)
Ruby Beale, (Organizational) Effects of organizational culture on diversity and multiculturalism
Cleopatra Caldwell, (General) The mental health consequences of adolescent childbearing within an intergenerational family context; the influence of self-efficacy and exercise on the sexual behaviors of African American adolescent females; the family support functions of Black churches
Susan Contratto, (Feminist Practice) clinical issues in the repressed memory debate and, the long term consequences of sexual assault
Gail Farley, (Clinical)
Sharon Gold-Steinberg, (Clinical) Women's health issues including abortion; incest and child abuse; teaching coping skills to children
Jane Hassinger, (Feminist Practice) women's psychological development, women's career and family planning strategies
Christina Jose, (General)
Diana Kardia, (General)
Laura Klem, (Social) Research and data analysis
Kathy Kotre, (Developmental)
Roger Lauer, (Clinical)
Shin-Yun Lee, (Developmental)
Irving Leon, (Clinical) Impact of pre-natal loss
Pamela Moitoike, (Clinical) Attribution and cognitive appraisal of blatant and subtle discrimination; ethnic identity; effective multicultural treatment
Marcy Plunkett, (Feminist Practice) Women's identity development, particularly in career roles, maternal roles, work/family issues, college-aged development for women.
Paul Price, (Cognition and Perception)
Mildred Tirado, (Clinical) Multi-cultural issues related to clinical practice; gender and group process
Clinical Instructors
Margaret Buttenheim, (Clinical) Depression, gender differences
Michael Casher, (Clinical) Depression, suicide
Suzanne Fechner-Bates, (Clinical) Etiological factors in eating disorders, eating disorders in "special" populations (men, athletes, etc.), comorbidity of psychological disorders, diagnosis and assessment of psychopathology
Laura Gold, (Clinical)
Robert C. Gunn, (Clinical) Causes of smoking behavior, group psychotherapy
Deborah Kraus, (Clinical)
Pamela Ludolph, (Clinical) Psychoanalytic concepts, dissociative phenomena, personality disorders, depressive personalities
Jeffrey Urist, (Clinical) Adolescence; thought disorder
James Whiteside, (Clinical)
Jean Wixom, (Clinical) Borderline Personality Disorder; sexual abuse and the psychological trauma
Adjunct Professors
Charles Behling, (General)
Adam Drewnowski, (Biopsychology) Obesity and eating disorders
Len Eron, (Social) Development of aggression and violence in children; longitudinal studies of personality; effects of media on behavior
Luis O. Gómez, (General) Buddhist religion and philosophy (Indian and Chinese Mahayana)
Melvin Guyer, (Clinical) Family law
Regula Herzog, (Social) Productivity in older age
Josef M. Miller, (Biopsychology) Encoding and central processing of human speech
Patricia Waller, (Cognition and Perception) Highway safety, driver behavior, injury prevention
Adjunct Associate Professors
J. Wayne Aldridge, (Biopsychology) Neuronal mechanisms of behavior
Morton Chethik, (Clinical) Child psychotherapeutic process, impact of divorce
William (Nick) Collins, (General)
Kristine Freeark, (Clinical)
Robert Hatcher, (Clinical) Psychological assessment, peer counseling
Sherry L. Hatcher, (Clinical) Adolescent development, psychology of women
Marita Ingelhart, (Social) Reactions to critical life events, socialization, attitude change
Susan Krantz, (Clinical) Adult-onset chronic disabilities
Jerry Miller, (Clinical) Childhood psychopathology; community-based treatment; gifted children
Bryan E. Pfingst, (Biopsychology) Physiology and psychophysics of hearing, animal psychophysics
Adjunct Assistant Professors
Robert Belli, (Social) Eyewitness memory and report, autobiographical memory, memory in applied contexts, cognitive and memory processes associated with survey report
Mary Lou Davis, (Organizational) Work organizations, working teams, worker participation, burnout
Geoffrey Gerstner, (Biopsychology)
James Hansell, (Clinical) Abnormal psychology
Carol Holden, (Clinical)
Thomas Horner, (Clinical) Infant and early childhood development
Ned Kirsch, (Clinical) Personal and family accommodations to neuropsychological impairment
Kimberlyn Leary, (Clinical) Abnormal behavior, children
Naomi E. Lohr, (Clinical) Adult psychotherapy, affective disorders
Gretchen Lopez, (General)
James Plunkett, (Clinical) Infancy and early childhood development, impact of chronic/severe neonatal psychopathology
Ellen Quart, (Developmental)
Jay Rathbun, (Clinical) Late adolescent and adult psychotherapy
Francois Rochat, (Clinical)
John Schulenberg, (Social) Adolescence and young adulthood
Adjunct Lecturers
Jeff Evans, human neurocognitive functioning, especially high level cognitive control and spatial perception
Dwight Fontenot, (Cognition and Perception) Music perception and memory; Memory structure and function
Randy Roth, (Clinical) Psychological factors and treatment outcome of chronic pain; musculoskeletal pain; health psychology
Steven Sternberg, (Developmental) Early childhood education
Visiting Lecturer
Margery J. Adelson, (Clinical) Adult, adolescent psychopathology, psychotherapy
Research Scientists
Aldo Badiani, (Biopsychology)
Dianne Camp, (Biopsychology) Gender differences in brain and behavior; neuro-chemistry and behavior
Professors Emeriti Matthew Alpern, John W. Atkinson, Bettie Arthur,
Lenin Baler, David C. Bowers, Donald R. Brown, Nathan S. Caplan, Dorwin
Cartwright, William L. Cash, Jr., S. Thomas Cummings, Elizabeth M. Douvan,
Stanford C. Ericksen, Raphael E. Ezekiel, John R.P. French, Jr., Basil S.
Georgopoulos, Martin G. Gold, Alexander Z. Guiora, Ralph W. Heine, Erasmus
Hoch, Robert L. Kahn, Daniel Katz, Merle Lawrence, Richard Mann, K. Gerald
Marsden, Wilbert J. McKeachie, John Milholland, William C. Morse, Lorraine
Nadelman, Warren T. Norman, Donald C. Pelz, William C. Rhodes, Stanley E.
Seashore, J.E. Keith Smith, William C. Stebbins, Arnold S. Tannenbaum, William
R. Uttal, Elliot S. Valenstein, Edward Walker, Daniel J. Weintraub, Frederick
Wyatt, Robert B. Zajonc, Alvin Zander.
Research Scientist Emeritus Ernest Harberg
Undergraduate courses in psychology give students an opportunity to learn
what research has shown about how behavior is motivated; how we perceive,
learn, and think; how individuals differ from one another; how the personality
develops from infancy to maturity and is expressed by behavior; and how
interpersonal factors affect human relationships in the home, on the job,
and in the community.
The curriculum in Psychology is intended to enhance one's understanding of
behavioral science and of oneself and others in terms of concepts developed
by study. The undergraduate concentration program is not intended to prepare
students for any specific vocational objective; to become a professional
psychologist requires from two to four years (or more) of graduate study.
May be elected as a departmental concentration program
Bachelor of Arts. 30 credits in post-introductory courses, including:
1. Statistics: One course. Statistics 402 is required. Students
interested in a stronger mathematical foundation in Statistics may substitute
Statistics 425 and 426.
2. Lab Requirement: Each psychology concentrator must complete
two lab courses. A students may either complete two labs from the list of
research-based lab courses, or the student may take one lab from the list
of research based lab courses and one lab from the list of experiential lab
courses.
Research-Based Courses:
Psychology 303, 331, 332, 341,
342, 343, 351, 361, 371, 372, 381, 383, 391, 510.
Experiential Lab Courses:
Psychology 304, 305, 306,
307, 308, 310, 579.
4 credits of Psychology 211, Project Outreach, completed in two different
sections. Psychology 211 is graded credit/no credit. The credits do not count
toward the 30 credits required for the concentration.
3 credits of Psychology 404 or 405 (Field Practicum), or 409 (Field Practicum
in Research Techniques). Psychology 404, 405, and 409 are graded credit/no
credit. The credits do not count toward the 30 credits required for the
concentration.
3. Breadth Requirement: At least one course from four of the
following five groups:
Group I. Psychology 340.
Group II. Psychology 330.
Group III. Psychology 350.
Group IV. Psychology 360, 380, or 390.
Group V. Psychology 370.
Additional Concentration Courses.
The following courses may be used to fulfill additional concentration
requirements: Psych. 301, 310, 311, 312, 313, 314, 315, 316, 372, 400-402,
410, 411, 412, 430, 431, 432, 433, 434, 436, 439, 441, 442, 443, 444, 445,
446, 447, 448, 451, 453, 455, 456, 459, 463, 464, 467, 468, 471, 474, 475,
482, 486, 488, 490, 491, 498, 500-502, 504, 506, 512, 513, 514, 530, 531,
539, 541, 542, 551, 558, 561, 565, 570, 571, 572, 573, 574, 575, 576, 577,
579, 581, 590, 591, 592.
Courses which may not be used as part of a concentration in psychology are
identified in the course listings. Concentrators who are planning to earn
graduate degrees in psychology may find a supplementary background in the
biological sciences or in the social and behavioral sciences (i.e., anthropology,
sociology, etc.) helpful in their later studies. Concentrators are also advised
that additional courses in mathematics, communication sciences, and logic
are likely to facilitate advanced study in psychology. A student's personal
interests should determine the shape of the concentration plan.
Bachelor of Science. The preconcentration and concentration requirements
are as stated above for the A.B. in Psychology, except the students must
have a total of 60 credits in natural science courses, to include those courses
taken to satisfy Psychology concentration requirements as stated above.
May be elected as a departmental concentration program
After Introductory Psychology, students must complete:
1. A minimum of 34 credits in post-introductory courses, including the required
Psychology courses and cognate courses listed below.
2. A total of 60 credits of mathematics and natural science
(including the Natural Science Psychology courses).
3. Other Required Courses.
a. Statistics: One course. Statistics 402 is recommended, but Statistics 425 and 426 may be substituted by students interested in a stronger mathematical foundation. Other courses, as appropriate, may be substituted with approval of a psychology concentration advisor.
b. Advanced Lab requirement:
1. Option 1: Two courses from the following: Psych. 331, 332, 341, 342, 343,
Biol. 308, 326, 419, 429, and 493.
Note: One only biology laboratory may be used toward the psychology as a
natural science concentration.
2. Option 2: One regular lab from Option 1 and one three-credit independent
research course (504), or Honors 510 may be used towards the lab
requirement if a Psychology advisor determines that it provides a natural
science research experience.
c. Breadth requirement: Two courses from the following three groups:Group I. Psych. 330.
Group II. Psych. 430.
Group III. Psych. 340.d. Advanced psychology as a natural science course requirement. Four additional upper-level natural science courses in Psychology selected from the following: Psych. 330, 340, 400, 430, 431, 432, 433, 434, 436, 437, 439, 443, 444, 447, 500, 530, 531, 541, 542. With permission from the concentration advisor, other courses such as special seminars may be substituted.
e. Psychology as a social science requirement. One course selected from the following: Psych. 255, 350, 360, 370, 380, 390. With the approval of the concentration advisor, a social science psychology course that is not on the above list may be substituted.
f. Cognate course requirement. One course selected from the following list (or an approved substitute): Anthro. 568; Biol. 307, 310, 311, 325, 390, 419, 422, 425, 494, 523, 524, 451; Biol. Chem. 415; Cogn. Sci. 322 (University Courses); Comp. Sci. 270, 274; Ling 211, 411, 412, 413, 414, 415.
110. Learning to Learn. (4). (SS).
111. Introduction to Psychology. Psych. 111 serves, as do Psych.
112 or 113, as a prerequisite for advanced courses in the department and
as a prerequisite to concentration. No credit granted to those who have completed
or are enrolled in 112, 113, 114, or 115. Psych. 111 may not be included
in a concentration plan in psychology. (4). (SS). Students in Psychology
111 are required to spend five hours outside of class participating as subjects
in research projects.
112. Introduction to Psychology as a Natural Science. Credit
is granted for both Psych. 112 and 113; no credit granted to those who have
completed or are enrolled in 111, 114, or 115. Psych. 112 may not be included
in a concentration plan in psychology. (4). (NS). (BS). Students in Psychology
112 are required to spend five hours outside of class participating as subjects
in research projects.
114. Honors Introduction to Psychology. Open to Honors students;
others by permission of instructor. No credit granted to those who have completed
or are enrolled in 111, 112, 113, or 115. May not be included in a concentration
plan in psychology. (4). (SS). Students in Psychology 114 are required to
spend five hours outside of class participating as subjects in research projects.
115. Honors Introduction to Psychology as a Natural Science.
Open to Honors students; others by permission of instructor. No credit
granted to those who have completed or are enrolled in 111, 112, 113 or 114.
Psych. 115 may not be included in a concentration plan in psychology. (4).
(NS). (BS). Students in Psychology 115 are required to spend five hours outside
of class participating as subjects in research projects.
120. First-Year Seminar in Psychology as a Social Science. Open
only to first-year students. May not be included in a concentration plan
in psychology. (3). (SS). May be repeated for a total of six credits.
121. First-Year Seminar in Psychology as a Natural Science.
Open only to first-year students. May not be included in a concentration
plan in psychology. (3). (NS). May be repeated for a total of six credits.
122. Intergroup Dialogues. Permission of Instructor. Intended
primarily for first and second year students. (2). (Excl). May not be included
in a concentration in Psychology. May be repeated for a total of four credits.
125. Drugs, Culture, and Human Behavior.May not be used as
a prerequisite for the psychology concentration. May not be included in a
concentration plan in psychology. (3). (SS).
204. Individual Research. Introductory psychology and permission
of instructor. May not be included in a concentration plan in psychology.
(1-6). (Excl). (INDEPENDENT). May be elected for a total of 6 credits.
206. Tutorial Reading. Introductory psychology and permission
of instructor. May not be included in a concentration plan in psychology.
(1-6). (Excl). (INDEPENDENT). May be elected for a total of 6 credits.
211. Outreach. Prior or concurrent enrollment in introductory
psychology. May not be included in a concentration plan in psychology. (1-3).
(Excl). Offered mandatory credit/no credit. Laboratory fee ($15) required.
(EXPERIENTIAL). May be repeated for a total of 6 credits.
255. Patterns of Development. Enrollment in the Inteflex Program
or permission of instructor. Inteflex students electing a concentration in
psychology may use Psych. 255 as the introductory prerequisite. No credit
granted to those who have completed or are enrolled in 350. (4). (Excl).
301. Teaching or Supervising Laboratory or Fieldwork in Psychology.
Permission of instructor. (1-3). (Excl). (TUTORIAL). May not be elected
for credit more than once.
303. Special Problems in Psychology: Advanced Laboratory. One
of the following: Psych. 330, 340, 350, 360, 370, 380, or 390. (2-4). (Excl).
304. Practicum in Teaching and Leading Groups. Introductory
psychology. A total of 6 credits of Psychology letter-graded experiential
courses may be counted for the Psychology concentration. (2-4). (Excl).
(EXPERIENTIAL). May be repeated for a total of 6 credits.
305. Practicum in Psychology. Introductory psychology. A total
of 6 credits of Psychology letter-graded experiential courses may be counted
for the Psychology concentration. (1-4). (Excl). (EXPERIENTIAL). May be repeated
for a total of 6 credits.
306. Project Outreach Group Leading. Introductory psychology,
Psychology 211, and permission of instructor. A total of 6 credits of Psychology
letter-graded experiential courses may be counted for the Psychology
concentration. (3). (Excl). (EXPERIENTIAL). May be repeated for a total of
6 credits.
307. Directed Experiences with Children. Introductory psychology
and permission of instructor. A total of 6 credits of Psychology letter-graded
experiential courses may be counted for the Psychology concentration. (3-4).
(Excl). (EXPERIENTIAL). May be repeated for a total of 7 credits.
308. Peer Advising Practicum in Psychology. Introductory psychology
and permission of instructor. A total of 6 credits of Psychology letter-graded
experiential courses may be counted for the Psychology concentration. (2-3).
(Excl). (EXPERIENTIAL). May be repeated for a total of 6 credits.
310. Training in Processes of Intergroup Dialogues. Permission
of Instructor. Open to Juniors and Seniors. (3). (Excl). May be used as an
experiential lab in the Psychology concentration. A total of six credits
of Psychology letter-graded experiential courses may be counted for the
Psychology concentration. (EXPERIENTIAL).
311. Practicum in Facilitating Intergroup Dialogues. Psychology
310 and permission of instructor. A total of six credits of Psychology
letter-graded experiential courses may be counted for the Psychology
concentration. (3). (Excl). (EXPERIENTIAL).
312. Junior Honors: Research Methods in Psychology. Honors
concentrators in Psychology. (3). (Excl).
313/Rel. 369. Psychology and Religion. Introductory psychology
or senior standing. (4). (Excl).
314/Inteflex 201. Nature of Illness I. Inteflex-Med. 210. (4).
(Excl).
315/CAAS 327. Psychological Aspects of the Black Experience.
One course in psychology or Afroamerican and African Studies. (3).
(SS).
316/CAAS 331. The World of the Black Child. One course in
psychology or Afroamerican and African Studies. (3). (Excl).
330. Introduction to Biopsychology. Introductory psychology.
(4). (NS). (BS).
331. Laboratories in Biopsychology. Psych. 330. (4). (Excl).
(BS). Satisfies a Psychology research-based laboratory requirement.
340. Introduction to Cognitive Psychology. Introductory psychology.
(4). (NS). (BS).
341. Superlab in Psychology as a Natural Science. Psych. 330
or 340. (4). (NS). (BS). Satisfies a Psychology research-based laboratory
requirement.
342. Laboratory in Judgment and Decision Making. Psych. 340
or 542. (3). (Excl). Satisfies a Psychology research-based laboratory
requirement.
350. Introduction to Developmental Psychology. Introductory
psychology. No credit granted to those who have completed or are enrolled
in 255. (4). (SS).
351. Advanced Laboratory in Developmental Psychology. Stat.
402 and Psych. 350. (3). (Excl). Satisfies a Psychology research-based laboratory
requirement.
360. Introduction to Organizational Psychology. Introductory
psychology. (4). (SS).
361. Advanced Laboratory in Organizational Psychology. Psych.
360. (4). (Excl). Satisfies a Psychology research-based laboratory requirement.
370. Introduction to Psychopathology. Introductory psychology.
(4). (SS).
372. Advanced Laboratory in Psychopathology. Psych. 370. (3).
(Excl). Satisfies a Psychology research-based laboratory requirement.
380. Introduction to Social Psychology. Introductory psychology.
(4). (SS).
381/Soc. 472. Advanced Laboratory in Social Psychology. Stat.
402 and Psych. 380. (3). (Excl). Satisfies a Psychology research-based laboratory
requirement.
390. Introduction to the Psychology of Personality.
Introductory psychology. (4). (SS).
391. Advanced Laboratory in Personality. Stat. 402, and prior
or concurrent enrollment in Psych. 390. (3). (Excl). Satisfies a Psychology
research-based laboratory requirement.
400. Special Problems in Psychology as a Natural Science.
Introductory psychology. Only 6 credits of Psych. 400, 401, 402 and
500, 501, 502 combined may be counted toward a concentration plan in psychology,
and a maximum of 12 credits may be counted toward graduation. (2-4). (Excl).
(BS). May be repeated for credit.
401. Special Problems in Psychology as a Social Science.
Introductory psychology. Only 6 credits of Psych. 400, 401, 402, 500,
501, and 502 combined may be counted toward a concentration plan in psychology.
(1-4). (Excl). May be repeated for a total of 12 credits.
402. Special Problems in Psychology. Introductory Psychology.
Only 6 credits of Psych. 400, 401, 402 and 500, 501, 502 combined may be
counted toward a concentration plan in psychology, and a maximum of 12 credits
may be counted toward graduation. (2-4). (Excl). May be repeated for credit.
404. Field Practicum. One of the following: Psychology 330,
340, 350, 360, 370, 380, or 390; and permission of instructor. Credits may
not be used toward the psychology concentration. (1-12). (Excl). Offered
mandatory credit/no credit. May be used as an experiential lab in psychology.
(EXPERIENTIAL). May be repeated for a total of 12 credits.
405. Field Practicum. One of the following: Psychology 330,
340, 350, 360, 370, 380, or 390; and permission of instructor. Credits may
not be used toward the psychology concentration. (1-12). (Excl). Offered
mandatory credit/no credit. May be used as an experiential lab in psychology.
(EXPERIENTIAL). May be repeated for a total of 12 credits.
409. Field Practicum in Research Techniques. One of the following:
Psychology 330, 340, 350, 360, 370, 380, or 390; and permission of instructor.
Credits may not be used toward the psychology concentration. (1-4). (Excl).
Offered mandatory credit/no credit. This course may be used as an experiential
lab in psychology. (EXPERIENTIAL). May be repeated for a total of 12 credits.
May be elected for a maximum of two terms and/or four credits with the same
instructor.
411/WS 419. Gender and Group Process in a Multicultural Context.
One course in women's studies or psychology. (3). (SS).
412. Peer Counseling. Introductory psychology. (3). (Excl).
418/Religion 448. Psychology and Spiritual Development. (3).
(Excl).
430. Comparative Animal Behavior. Introductory psychology or
introductory biology or equivalent. I. (3). (NS). (BS).
431. Biopsychology of Animal and Human Behavior. Psych. 330.
(3). (Excl). (BS).
432. Reproductive Behavior in Mammals. Psych. 330, 430, or
437 or equivalent. (3). (Excl). (BS).
433. Biopsychology of Motivation. Psych. 330. (3). (NS). (BS).
434. Human Neuropsychology. Introductory psychology. No credit
granted to those who have completed or are enrolled in Psych. 634. (4). (NS).
(BS).
436. Drugs of Abuse, Brain and Behavior. Psych. 330. (3). (Excl).
(BS).
437/Anthro. 368. Primate Social Behavior I. (4). (NS). (BS).
439/Anthro. 468/WS 468. Behavioral Biology of Women. One of
the following: Anthro. 161, 361, 368, Psych. 430, Biol. 494. (4). (Excl).
(BS).
442. Perception, Science, and Reality. Introductory psychology.
(3). (NS). (BS).
443. Learning and Memory. Psych. 340. (3). (NS). (BS).
444. Perception. Psych. 340. (3). (NS). (BS).
445/Ling. 447. Psychology of Language. Psych. 340. (3). (Excl).
447. Psychology of Thinking. Psych. 340. (3). (NS). (BS).
451/Ling. 451. Development of Language and Thought. Psych.
350. (3). (SS).
453. Socialization of the Child. Psych. 350. (3). (SS).
455. Cognitive Development. Psych. 350. (3). (SS).
456. Human Infancy. Psych. 350. (3). (Excl).
459. Psychology of Aging. Psych. 350. (3). (SS).
464. Group Behavior in Organizations. Psych. 360. (3). (Excl).
470. Introduction to Community Psychology. Introductory psychology.
(3). (SS).
471. Marriage and the Family. Introductory psychology. (3).
(SS).
474. Introduction to Behavior Therapy. Psych. 370. (3). (Excl).
476. Clinical Study of the Family. Psych. 370. (3). (Excl).
488/Soc. 465. Sociological Analysis of Deviant Behavior. (3).
(SS).
490. Political Psychology. Introductory psychology. (3). (SS).
498. Gender and the Individual. Introductory Psych. (3). (Excl).
500. Special Problems in Psychology as a Natural Science.
Introductory Psychology. Only 6 credits of Psych. 400, 401, 402, 500,
501, and 502 may be counted toward a concentration plan in psychology. (2-4).
(Excl). (BS). May be repeated for a total of 12 credits.
501. Special Problems in Psychology as a Social Science.
Introductory Psychology. Only 6 credits of Psych. 400, 401, 402, 500,
501, and 502 may be counted toward a concentration plan in psychology. (1-4).
(Excl). May be repeated for a total of 12 credits.
502. Special Problems in Psychology. Introductory Psychology.
Only 6 credits of Psych. 400, 401, 402, 500, 501, and 502 may be counted
toward a concentration plan in psychology. (1-4). (Excl). May be repeated
for a total of 12 credits.
505(504). Faculty Directed Advanced Research. Permission of
instructor and one of the following: Psychology 330, 340, 350, 360, 370,
380, or 390. A combined total of 6 credits of Psych. 505 and 507 may be included
in a concentration plan in psychology. (1-6). (Excl). May be used as an
experiential lab by faculty petition to the Committee on Undergraduate Studies.
(INDEPENDENT). May be elected for a total of 6 credits.
507(506). Faculty Directed Advanced Tutorial Reading.
Permission of instructor and approval of the Department of Psychology
Committee on Undergraduate Studies; and one of the following: Psychology
330, 340, 350, 360, 370, 380, or 390. A combined total of 6 credits of Psych.
505 and 507 may be included in a concentration plan in psychology. (1-6).
(Excl). (INDEPENDENT). May be elected for a total of 6 credits.
510. Senior Honors Research I. Psych. 312 and permission of
the Psychology Honors concentration advisor. (3). (Excl).
511. Senior Honors Research II. Psych. 312 and permission of
the Psychology Honors concentration advisor. (3). (Excl).
530. Advanced Comparative Animal Behavior. Psych. 430, 437,
or 438. (3). (Excl). (BS).
531. Advanced Topics in Biopsychology. Psych. 330. (3). (Excl).
(BS). May be repeated for credit.
541. Advanced Topics in Cognition and Perception. Psych. 340.
(3). (Excl). (BS). May be repeated for credit.
542. Decision Processes. An introductory course in statistics
is recommended but not required. (3). (NS). (BS).
551. Advanced Topics in Developmental Psychology. Psych. 350.
(3). (Excl). May be repeated for credit.
558. Psychology of Adolescence. Psych. 350. (3; 2-3 in the
half-term). (Excl).
561. Advanced Topics in Organizational Psychology. Psych. 360.
(3). (Excl). May be repeated for credit.
565. Organizational Systems. Psych. 360. (3). (Excl).
570. The Psychological Study of Lives. Psych. 370 or 390 and
junior standing. (3). (Excl).
571. Advanced Topics in Clinical Psychology. Psych. 370. (3).
(Excl). May be repeated for credit.
572. Development and Structure of the Self. Psych 370 and junior
standing. (3). (Excl).
573. Developmental Disturbances of Childhood. Psych. 350 or
390, and Psych. 370. (3). (Excl).
574. Clinical Psychology. Psych. 370 and psychology concentration.
(3). (Excl).
575. Perspectives in Advanced Psychopathology. Two courses
from among Psych. 350, 370, 390, 443, 444, 451, and 558. (3). (Excl).
581. Advanced Topics in Social Psychology. Psych. 380. (3).
(Excl). May be repeated for credit.
591. Advanced Topics in Personality Psychology. Psych. 380.
(3). (Excl). May be repeated for credit.
592. Personality Theory. Psych. 390. (3). (Excl).