Psychology

University of California, Berkeley

This is an archived copy of the 2017-18 guide. To access the most recent version of the guide, please visit http://guide.berkeley.edu.

Overview

Psychology as a scientific discipline aims to describe, understand, and predict the behavior of living organisms. In doing so, psychology embraces the many factors that influence behavior - from sensory experience to complex cognition, from the role of genetics to that of social and cultural environments, from the processes that explain behavior in early childhood to those that operate in older ages, and from normal development to pathological conditions. The Psychology Department at UC Berkeley reflects the diversity of our discipline's mission covering six key areas of research: Behavioral and Systems Neuroscience; Clinical Science; Cognition; Cognitive Neuroscience; Developmental, and Social-Personality Psychology. Despite the existence of these specialization areas, our program learning goals focus on fostering methodological, statistical and critical thinking skills that are not tied to any one particular content area in psychology but are relevant for all of them.

The Department of Psychology’s Postbaccalaureate Certificate Program is a comprehensive retraining and immersion program for students interested in applying to graduate school in psychology. The program features intensive coursework to complete an undergraduate psychology major in three or four semesters, research opportunities with our world-class faculty, in-depth advising, and a supportive community. If you are inspired to enter the field of psychology, switching focus from a previous major or changing careers, the postbaccalaureate program may be a path to consider.  

Clinic

The Psychology Clinic is a center for clinical training and research. The Psychology Clinic is part of the Clinical Science Program in the Department of Psychology at UC Berkeley. This graduate program is committed to excellence in scientific training, and to using clinical science as the foundation for designing, implementing, and evaluating assessment and intervention procedures. Established in 1963, The Psychology Clinic provides mental health services to Berkeley and surrounding Bay Area communities. We conduct research in a variety of areas, such as intervention programs for children with ADHD, adolescents with depression and sleep difficulties, people with bipolar disorder, people with anxiety, qualities of marital interaction,  and the emotional and social difficulties associated with mental illness. We also provide comprehensive assessment services for a variety of people, including children with ADHD and adults with mild cognitive impairment. Our staff includes doctoral students and interns in the Clinical Science Program and supervising faculty and clinicians from the community.

Undergraduate Program

Psychology: BA

Graduate Program

Psychology: PhD

Visit Department Website

Courses

Psychology

PSYCH 1 General Psychology 3 Units

Terms offered: Fall 2018, Spring 2018, Fall 2017
Introduction to the principal areas, problems, and concepts of psychology. This course is required for the major; students not considering a psychology major are directed to 2.

General Psychology: Read More [+]

PSYCH N1 General Psychology 3 Units

Terms offered: Summer 2018 Second 6 Week Session, Summer 2017 Second 6 Week Session, Summer 2016 Second 6 Week Session
Introduction to the principal areas, problems, and concepts of psychology. This course is required for the major; students not considering a psychology major are directed to 2.

General Psychology: Read More [+]

PSYCH W1 General Psychology 3 Units

Terms offered: Fall 2018, Summer 2018 8 Week Session, Spring 2018
Introduction to the principal areas, problems, and concepts of psychology.

General Psychology: Read More [+]

PSYCH 2 Principles of Psychology 3 Units

Terms offered: Fall 2018, Spring 2018, Fall 2017
An overview of psychology for students who will not major in the field. This course satisfies the prerequisite for upper division decade courses.

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PSYCH 3 Introduction to How the Brain Works 1 Unit

Terms offered: Summer 2018 Second 6 Week Session, Summer 2017 Second 6 Week Session, Summer 2016 Second 6 Week Session
This course will give a rigorous yet accessible overview of our current understanding of how the brain works and how it is altered by experience. Specifically, the class provides: an introduction to the structure and function of the sensory and motor systems; discussions of disorders and phenomena such as blindsight, synaesthesia, color blindness, and phantom limbs; and a lecture
with presentation of classical experiments on the capacity of the young and adult brain for plasticity and learning.
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PSYCH 4 Emotional Intelligence 2 Units

Terms offered: Summer 2018 Second 6 Week Session
This course will examine research on emotional intelligence and techniques for developing emotional intelligence. We will discuss various components of emotional intelligence, including the ability to identity and manage one’s emotions, successfully motivate oneself to achieve one’s goals, read other people’s emotions accurately, and use emotions to navigate social relationships effectively. Material will be taken from social psychology, clinical
psychology, and cognitive neuroscience.
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PSYCH 5 Technology vs. Psychology: The Internet Revolution and the Rise of the Virtual Self 2 Units

Terms offered: Summer 2018 Second 6 Week Session, Summer 2017 Second 6 Week Session, Fall 1995
Most people have an online alter ego that is stronger and sexier but also angrier, more impulsive, and less ethical. These traits can become incorporated into offline personality, turning us into our avatar. Other psychological damage comes from the lack of online privacy and our new relationship with information. But the “Net” effect is not all bad; technology can also contribute to psychological
wellbeing and make possible new treatments, including computerized therapy and virtual reality exposure therapy.
Technology vs. Psychology: The Internet Revolution and the Rise of the Virtual Self: Read More [+]

PSYCH 6 Stress and Coping 2 Units

Terms offered: Summer 2018 Second 6 Week Session, Summer 2017 Second 6 Week Session, Summer 2016 Second 6 Week Session
This course is designed to provide students with an in-depth analysis of the various areas within the field of psychology that address topics related to stress and coping. In particular, we will cover the biological, social, personality, cognitive, and clinical factors that play a role in the development of stress and subsequent coping techniques that can be used to deal with
stress. The class will have a strong focus on the empirical findings relating to the subject.
Stress and Coping: Read More [+]

PSYCH 7 The Person in Big Data 2 Units

Terms offered: Summer 2018 Second 6 Week Session, Summer 2017 Second 6 Week Session, Summer 2016 Second 6 Week Session
This course will introduce students to the basic principles and methods of personality and social psychology as applied to a rapidly growing topic of modern society--the collection and analysis of online social “big data.” Students will learn about the ways in which big data has historically been defined, collected, and utilized, as well as fundamental concepts in person perception
and social behavior that are relevant to topics of big data collection, analysis, and interpretation.
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PSYCH 8 Music and the Brain 2 Units

Terms offered: Summer 2015 10 Week Session, Summer 2015 Second 6 Week Session
This course will explore mental processes that allow listeners to perceive music and performers to produce it. We will compare music from various traditions to examine shared cognitive principles and emotional responses; comparisons to language will highlight neural specializations for music. Developmental psychology will inform discussion of learned vs. innate components of musical behavior. Students will design
experiments to test hypotheses relating to music cognition.
Music and the Brain: Read More [+]

PSYCH 9 Changing Behavior: Lessons from a Dog Trainer 1 Unit

Terms offered: Summer 2017 Second 6 Week Session
In this course, we will examine behavior change – in you, and in those others you wish you could change -- by looking at basic principles that apply across species: operant conditioning, classical conditioning, motivation, stress and development. Animal trainers rely on very specific principles when modifying behavior, and those principles apply to every animal, human and non-human animals alike. Come learn what training animals can tell you
about your own life, learning, motivation and habits!
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PSYCH 10 Research and Data Analysis in Psychology 4 Units

Terms offered: Summer 2018 8 Week Session, Spring 2018, Fall 2017
The class covers research design, statistical reasoning, and statistical methods appropriate for psychological research. Topics covered in research design include the scientific method, experimental versus correlational designs, controls and placebos, within and between subject designs and temporal or sequence effects. Topics covered in statistics include descriptive versus inferential statistics, linear regression and correlation
and univariate statistical tests: t-test, one way and two-way ANOVA, chi-square test. The class also introduces non-parametric tests and modeling. Prospective Psychology majors need to take this course to be admitted to the major.
Research and Data Analysis in Psychology: Read More [+]

PSYCH 14 Psychology of Gender 3 Units

Terms offered: Summer 2014 10 Week Session, Summer 2014 First 6 Week Session, Summer 2013 First 6 Week Session
Examination of various factors in the development of feminine and masculine roles, including personality, social processes, biology, and culture.

Psychology of Gender: Read More [+]

PSYCH C19 Drugs and the Brain 3 Units

Terms offered: Fall 2018, Fall 2017, Fall 2015, Fall 2014
The history, chemical nature, botanical origins, and effects on the human brain and behavior of drugs such as stimulants, depressants, psychedelics, analgesics, antidepressants, antipsychotics, steroids, and other psychoactive substances of both natural and synthetic origin. The necessary biological, chemical, and psychological background material for understanding the content of this course will be contained within the course itsel
f.
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PSYCH 24 Freshman Seminars 1 Unit

Terms offered: Fall 2018, Spring 2018, Fall 2017
The Berkeley Seminar Program has been designed to provide new students with the opportunity to explore an intellectual topic with a faculty member in a small-seminar setting. Berkeley Seminars are offered in all campus departments, and topics vary from department to department and semester to semester.

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PSYCH 39E Freshman/Sophomore Seminar 2 - 4 Units

Terms offered: Spring 2013, Fall 2011, Fall 2010
Freshman and sophomore seminars offer lower division students the opportunity to explore an intellectual topic with a faculty member and a group of peers in a small-seminar setting. These seminars are offered in all campus departments; topics vary from department to department and from semester to semester.

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PSYCH 39I Freshman/Sophomore Seminar 2 - 4 Units

Terms offered: Spring 2009
Freshman and sophomore seminars offer lower division students the opportunity to explore an intellectual topic with a faculty member and a group of peers in a small-seminar setting. These seminars are offered in all campus departments; topics vary from department to department and from semester to semester.

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PSYCH 39J Freshman/Sophomore Seminar 2 - 4 Units

Terms offered: Spring 2010
Freshman and sophomore seminars offer lower division students the opportunity to explore an intellectual topic with a faculty member and a group of peers in a small-seminar setting. These seminars are offered in all campus departments; topics vary from department to department and from semester to semester.

Freshman/Sophomore Seminar: Read More [+]

PSYCH 39K Freshman/Sophomore Seminar 2 - 4 Units

Terms offered: Fall 2010, Spring 2010
Freshman and sophomore seminars offer lower division students the opportunity to explore an intellectual topic with a faculty member and a group of peers in a small-seminar setting. These seminars are offered in all campus departments; topics vary from department to department and from semester to semester.

Freshman/Sophomore Seminar: Read More [+]

PSYCH 39L Freshman/Sophomore Seminar 2 - 4 Units

Terms offered: Spring 2010
Freshman and sophomore seminars offer lower division students the opportunity to explore an intellectual topic with a faculty member and a group of peers in a small-seminar setting. These seminars are offered in all campus departments; topics vary from department to department and from semester to semester.

Freshman/Sophomore Seminar: Read More [+]

PSYCH 39M Freshman/Sophomore Seminar 2 - 4 Units

Terms offered: Fall 2013, Spring 2013, Spring 2011
Freshman and sophomore seminars offer lower division students the opportunity to explore an intellectual topic with a faculty member and a group of peers in a small-seminar setting. These seminars are offered in all campus departments; topics vary from department to department and from semester to semester.

Freshman/Sophomore Seminar: Read More [+]

PSYCH 48 Brain Development and Aging 1 Unit

Terms offered: Summer 2013 10 Week Session, Summer 2013 First 6 Week Session
This is an introductory survey course on brain and cognitive development. It gives an overview of brain structure and function and how it changes throughout life. Topics include: effect of pre-natal maternal and paternal behavior in brain development; critical periods; experience-dependent changes in the brain; the adolescent brain; and the aging brain. We will also discuss developmental disorders such as Down syndrome
and the putative benefits of exercise and diet to brain health.
Brain Development and Aging: Read More [+]

PSYCH C61 Brain, Mind, and Behavior 3 Units

Terms offered: Spring 2018, Spring 2017, Spring 2016
Introduction to human brain mechanisms of sensation, movement, perception, thinking, learning, memory, and emotion in terms of anatomy, physiology, and chemistry of the nervous system in health and disease. Intended for students in the humanities and social sciences and others not majoring in the biological sciences.

Brain, Mind, and Behavior: Read More [+]

PSYCH C64 Exploring the Brain: Introduction to Neuroscience 3 Units

Terms offered: Summer 2018 8 Week Session, Summer 2017 8 Week Session, Summer 2016 8 Week Session
This course will introduce lower division undergraduates to the fundamentals of neuroscience. The first part of the course covers basic membrane properties, synapses, action potentials, chemical and electrical synaptic interactions, receptor potentials, and receptor proteins. The second part of the course covers networks in invertebrates, memory and learning behavior, modulation, vertebrate brain
and spinal cord, retina, visual cortex architecture, hierarchy, development, and higher cortical centers.
Exploring the Brain: Introduction to Neuroscience: Read More [+]

PSYCH 88 Data Science for Cognitive Neuroscience 3 Units

Terms offered: Spring 2018
The human brain is a complex information processing system and is currently the topic of multiple fascinating branches of research. Understanding how it works is a very challenging scientific task. In recent decades, multiple techniques for imaging the activity of the brain at work have been invented, which has allowed the field of cognitive neuroscience to flourish. Cognitive neuroscience is concerned with studying the neural mechanisms underlying various aspects
of cognition, by relating the activity in the brain to the tasks being performed by it. This typically requires exciting collaborations with other disciplines (e.g. psychology, biology, physics, computer science).
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PSYCH 98 Supervised Group Study 1 - 3 Units

Terms offered: Spring 2016, Fall 2015, Spring 2015
Group study of selected topics. Enrollment restricted. See Introduction to Courses and Curriculum section of this catalog.

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PSYCH 99 Supervised Independent Study and Research 1 - 3 Units

Terms offered: Fall 2013, Fall 2012, Spring 2012
Intended for freshmen and sophomores who wish to undertake a program of individual inquiry on a topic in psychology.

Supervised Independent Study and Research: Read More [+]

PSYCH 101 Research and Data Analysis in Psychology 4 Units

Terms offered: Fall 2018, Summer 2018 8 Week Session, Spring 2018
The course will concentrate on hypothesis formulation and testing, tests of significance, analysis of variance (one-way analysis), simple correlation, simple regression, and nonparametric statistics such as chi-square and Mann-Whitney U tests. Majors intending to be in the honors program must complete 101 by the end of their junior year.

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PSYCH 101D Data Science for Research Psychology 4 Units

Terms offered: Fall 2018
This Python based course builds upon the inferential and computational thinking skills developed in the Foundations of Data Science course by tying them to the classical statistical and research approaches used in Psychology. Topics include experimental design, control variables, reproducibility in science, probability distributions, parametric vs. non-parametric statistics, hypothesis tests (t-tests, one and two way ANOVA, chi-squared and odds-ratio), linear regression
and correlation.

Data Science for Research Psychology: Read More [+]

PSYCH 102 Methods for Research in Psychological Sciences 3 Units

Terms offered: Fall 2018, Fall 2017, Fall 2016
Lecture and computer lab course on advanced data analysis techniques used by researchers in psychology. The course will cover programming techniques in R and data analysis methods that include modeling, multivariate statistics, and data reduction and visualization techniques. The following topics will be covered: generalized linear model (includes logistic regression), discriminant analysis (includes multivariate ANOVA), principal component analysis
, and factor analysis.
Methods for Research in Psychological Sciences: Read More [+]

PSYCH 106 Psychology of Dreams 3 Units

Terms offered: Fall 2009, Fall 2006, Fall 2002
Dreaming is a necessary, universal nightly activity of the human mind and brain. This class will cover some of the major psychological theories, interpretations, and uses that have been made of dreams. Students will be encouraged to keep dream diaries to provide an experiential component to the class and so that they may apply the class topics and do research using the material they generate themselves.

Psychology of Dreams: Read More [+]

PSYCH 107 Buddhist Psychology 3 Units

Terms offered: Summer 2013 10 Week Session, Summer 2013 Second 6 Week Session, Summer 2012 First 6 Week Session
Based on tradition of direct observation of working of ordinary mind in everyday life situations. Provides contrasting perspective to present theories of cognition, perception, motivation, emotion, social interaction, and neurosis.

Buddhist Psychology: Read More [+]

PSYCH N107 Buddhist Psychology 3 Units

Terms offered: Summer 2014 10 Week Session, Summer 2014 Second 6 Week Session
Based on tradition of direct observation of working of ordinary mind in everyday life situations. Provides contrasting perspective to present theories of cognition, perception, motivation, emotion, social interaction, and neurosis.

Buddhist Psychology: Read More [+]

PSYCH N108 Clinical Applications of East Asian Meditation Practices 3 Units

Terms offered: Summer 2015 10 Week Session, Summer 2015 Second 6 Week Session
This course applies views and practices of Buddhist, Taoist, and Confucian schools of meditation. The emphasis in the course will be on practical and clinical applications of meditation such as working with emotions and the quest for psychological well-being. The basic laboratory technique will be various types of meditation.

Clinical Applications of East Asian Meditation Practices: Read More [+]

PSYCH 109 History of Psychology 3 Units

Terms offered: Fall 2012, Fall 2011, Fall 2007
Development of scientific study of human and animal behavior. Consideration of history of particular subject areas--such as biological, comparative, developmental, personality, and social psychology--as well as general trends.

History of Psychology: Read More [+]

PSYCH 110 Introduction to Biological Psychology 3 Units

Terms offered: Fall 2018, Fall 2017, Spring 2017
Survey of relations between behavioral and biological processes. Topics include sensory and perceptual processes, neural maturation, natural bases of motivation, and learning.

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PSYCH N110 Introduction to Biological Psychology 3 Units

Terms offered: Summer 2017 First 6 Week Session, Summer 2016 10 Week Session, Summer 2016 First 6 Week Session
Survey of relations between behavioral and biological processes. Topics include sensory and perceptual processes, neural maturation, natural bases of motivation, and learning.

Introduction to Biological Psychology: Read More [+]

PSYCH C113 Biological Clocks: Physiology and Behavior 3 Units

Terms offered: Fall 2018, Fall 2016, Fall 2012
A consideration of the biological clocks that generate daily, lunar, seasonal and annual rhythms in various animals including people. Emphasis on neuroendocrine substrates, development and adaptive significance of estrous cycles, feeding rhythms, sleep-wakefulness cycles, reproductive and hibernation cycles, body weight and migratory cycles.

Biological Clocks: Physiology and Behavior: Read More [+]

PSYCH 114 Biology of Learning 3 Units

Terms offered: Spring 2018, Spring 2017, Spring 2016
The biology of learning and neural plasticity is critical to our understanding of development, culture, behavioral change, uniqueness of individuals, and limits to an organism’s potential. We will study experimental investigations of behavior and neurobiology at the cellular and circuit level to get a basic introduction to what is known and unknown about learning and neural plasticity. Topics may include associative learning, habit formation
, fear, memory systems, neurons, synapses, dendritic spines and axonal boutons, LTP, and adult neurogenesis. We will discuss these topics in the context of normal development and disease. Students will become familiar with thinking about the brain at the level of circuits, cells, synapses, and proteins.
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PSYCH C116 Hormones and Behavior 3 Units

Terms offered: Spring 2018, Spring 2017, Spring 2016
This course provides a comprehensive overview of behavorial endocrinology beginning with hormone production and actions on target issues and continuing with an exploration of a variety of behaviors and their hormonal regulation/consequences. The course uses a comparative approach to examine the reciprocal interactions between the neuroendocrine system and behavior, considering the effects of hormone on development and adult behavior in addition
to how behavior regulates endocrine physiology. While much of the course focuses on non-human vertebrate species, the relevance to humans is explored where appropriate. Topics include sexual differentiation and sex differences in behavior, reproductive, parental, and aggressive behaviors, and hormonal and behavioral homeostatic regulation.
Hormones and Behavior: Read More [+]

PSYCH 117 Human Neuropsychology 3 Units

Terms offered: Fall 2018, Spring 2018, Spring 2016
This course covers the neural substrates of human behavior including: neuroanatomy, major methods in human brain research (EEG, MEG, PET, MRI, fMRI, TMS, Optical Imaging), neurological disorders resulting in neurobehavioral disorders (i.e. stroke, brain tumor, epilepsy, dementia) and classic neuropsychological syndromes (i.e. amnesia, aphasia, agnosia, executive control, emotional control).

Human Neuropsychology: Read More [+]

PSYCH N117 Human Neuropsychology 3 Units

Terms offered: Summer 2018 Second 6 Week Session, Summer 2017 Second 6 Week Session
This course covers the neural substrates of human behavior including: neuroanatomy, major methods in human brain research (EEG, MEG, PET, MRI, fMRI, TMS, Optical Imaging), neurological disorders resulting in neurobehavioral disorders (i.e. stroke, brain tumor, epilepsy, dementia) and classic neuropsychological syndromes (i.e. amnesia, aphasia, agnosia, executive control, emotional control).

Human Neuropsychology: Read More [+]

PSYCH 118 Topical Seminar in Biological Psychology 3 Units

Terms offered: Spring 2015, Fall 2003, Fall 2002
For a precise schedule of courses, check with the Student Services Office each semester.

Topical Seminar in Biological Psychology: Read More [+]

PSYCH C120 Basic Issues in Cognition 3 Units

Terms offered: Fall 2016, Fall 2015, Spring 2015
Theoretical foundations and current controversies in cognitive science will be discussed. Basic issues in cognition--including perception, imagery, memory, categorization, thinking, judgment, and development--will be considered from the perspectives of philosophy, psychology, computer science, and physiology. Particular emphasis will be placed on the nature, implications, and limitations of the computational model of mind.

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PSYCH N120 Basic Issues in Cognition 3 Units

Terms offered: Summer 2018 Second 6 Week Session, Summer 2017 Second 6 Week Session
Theoretical foundations and current controversies in cognitive science will be discussed. Basic issues in cognition--including perception, imagery, memory, categorization, thinking, judgment, and development--will be considered from the perspectives of philosophy, psychology, computer science, and physiology. Particular emphasis will be placed on the nature, implications, and limitations of the computational
model of mind.
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PSYCH 121 Animal Cognition 3 Units

Terms offered: Fall 2016, Spring 2016, Spring 2014
This course focuses on how animals process, organize, and retain information. Specific topics include learning and memory, sensory processes, navigation and migration, communication, and cross-species comparisons of behavior. Material will be drawn from the ethological, behavioral/experimental, and, to a lesser extent, the neurosciences literature.

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PSYCH 122 Introduction to Human Learning and Memory 3 Units

Terms offered: Spring 2014, Fall 2013, Fall 2012
Theoretical and experimental analysis of human learning and memory; short-term and long-term memory; coding and retrieval processes; transfer and interference; mechanisms of forgetting.

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PSYCH N122 Introduction to Human Learning and Memory 3 Units

Terms offered: Summer 2015 10 Week Session, Summer 2015 Second 6 Week Session
Theoretical and experimental analysis of human learning and memory; short-term and long-term memory; coding and retrieval processes; transfer and interference; mechanisms of forgetting.

Introduction to Human Learning and Memory: Read More [+]

PSYCH C123 Computational Models of Cognition 4 Units

Terms offered: Spring 2013, Fall 2011, Fall 2010
This course will provide advanced students in cognitive science and computer science with the skills to develop computational models of human cognition, giving insight into how people solve challenging computational problems, as well as how to bring computers closer to human performance. The course will explore three ways in which researchers have attempted to formalize cognition -- symbolic approaches, neural networks, and probability and statistics
-- considering the strengths and weaknesses of each.
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PSYCH 124 The Evolution of Human Social Behavior 3 Units

Terms offered: Spring 2018, Spring 1999, Spring 1998
This course surveys the evolution of human social behaviors, seen in light of similar behaviors in other species. Topics include mating systems, parenting, cooperation, communication, learning and teaching, social norms, crime, aggression and morality. The course concludes with how humans interact socially with other species, e.g., pets and wildlife, and how human social behavior is adapting to robots and social media. Performance will be
evaluated using weekly problem sets and three exams.
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PSYCH 125 The Developing Brain 3 Units

Terms offered: Spring 2018, Spring 2016, Fall 2014
What are the changes in brain structure and function that underlie improvements in cognitive abilities over childhood and adolescence? Or, coming from a different perspective, what insights can we gain regarding the neural basis of cognition by examining how the brain develops? And how are such findings relevant for medicine, education, and the law? The cutting-edge new field of developmental cognitive neuroscience is beginning to address these
and other questions. This course will consititute an overview of current research and methods in this field, focusing on both typically and atypically developing children and adolescents. There is no textbook for this course; all readings will be primary sources (e.g., journal articles).
The Developing Brain: Read More [+]

PSYCH C126 Perception 3 Units

Terms offered: Spring 2018, Spring 2017, Spring 2016
An introduction to principal theoretical constructs and experimental procedures in visual and auditory perception. Topics will include psychophysics; perception of color, space, shape, and motion; pattern recognition and perceptual attention.

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PSYCH C127 Cognitive Neuroscience 3 Units

Terms offered: Fall 2018, Fall 2017, Spring 2017
This course will examine research investigating the neurological basis of cognition. Material covered will include the study of brain-injured patients, neurophysiological research in animals, and the study of normal cognitive processes in humans with non-invasive behavioral and physiological techniques such as functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI), electroencephalography (EEG), and transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS). Topics to be
covered include perception, attention, memory, language, motor control, executive control, and emotion.
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PSYCH 128 Topical Seminars in Cognitive Psychology 3 Units

Terms offered: Spring 2017, Fall 2016, Spring 2015
For a precise schedule of offerings check with the Student Services Office each semester.

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PSYCH C129 Scientific Approaches to Consciousness 3 Units

Terms offered: Fall 2014, Spring 2013, Spring 2011
This course will examine the nature of human consciousness from the interdisciplinary perspective of cognitive science. It will cover topics from the philosophy of mind, cognitive linguistics, neuroscience, psychology, and computational models.
Recommended Courses: Psych C120/CogSci C100 OR Psych/CogSci C127

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PSYCH 130 Clinical Psychology 3 Units

Terms offered: Fall 2018, Spring 2018, Fall 2017
Theoretical and empirical approaches to the explanation of psychological dysfunction. The relation between theories of psychopathology and theories of intervention. A critical evaluation of the effects of individual, family, and community approaches to therapeutic and preventive intervention. Thematic focus of the course may change from year to year. See department notices for details.

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PSYCH N130 Clinical Psychology 3 Units

Terms offered: Summer 2016 First 6 Week Session, Summer 2014 10 Week Session, Summer 2014 First 6 Week Session
Theoretical and empirical approaches to the explanation of psychological dysfunction. The relation between theories of psychopathology and theories of intervention. A critical evaluation of the effects of individual, family, and community approaches to therapeutic and preventive intervention. Thematic focus of the course may change from year to year. See department notices for det
ails.
Clinical Psychology: Read More [+]

PSYCH 131 Developmental Psychopathology 3 Units

Terms offered: Spring 2018, Fall 2017, Spring 2017
This course will discuss linkages between developmental processes and child psychopathology. Included will be discussion of cognitive impairments in children, including learning disabilities and mental retardation; internalizing disorders, such as anxiety, withdrawal, and depression; externalizing disorders, such as attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder and conduct disorder; and child abuse and neglect. Psychobiological, familial, legal
, and societal factors will be emphasized.
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PSYCH 132 Applied Early Developmental Psychopathology 3 Units

Terms offered: Summer 2018 Second 6 Week Session, Spring 1999, Spring 1996
In this course, we examine the developmental trajectories that lead to mental illness in young children by: 1) understanding abnormal development in the context of normal development, and vice versa; 2) using a developmental approach to identify continuities and discontinuities; 3) addressing how mental illness develops and why; 4) learning the role genes and contexts of development play; 5) investigating multiple levels
, and the dynamic reciprocal transactions among them; and 6) applying our knowledge to children’s real-world experiences, to better understand the mental illness, its mechanisms, and its challenges.
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PSYCH 133 Psychology of Sleep 3 Units

Terms offered: Fall 2018, Spring 2017, Fall 2015
This course has two primary goals: (1) to provide a basic introduction to the study of sleep and an overview of sleep measurement, regulation, ontogeny, phylogeny, physiology, and psychology; and (2) to provide a basic introduction to sleep disorders including their classification, cause, and treatment.

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PSYCH N133 Psychology of Sleep 3 Units

Terms offered: Summer 2015 10 Week Session, Summer 2015 First 6 Week Session, Summer 2014 Second 6 Week Session
This course has two primary goals: (1) to provide a basic introduction to the study of sleep and an overview of sleep measurement, regulation, ontogeny, phylogeny, physiology, and psychology; and (2) to provide a basic introduction to sleep disorders including their classification, cause, and treatment.

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PSYCH 134 Health Psychology 3 Units

Terms offered: Fall 2017, Fall 2016, Fall 2015
This course will provide students with an introduction to Health Psychology. Students will learn about measurement of psychological, behavioral, and biological constructs; incidence and prevalence of psychological and medical disorders; introductions to endocrinology, immunology, and psychophysiology and how these systems are thought to relate psychology to health; as well as introductions to how science is working to understand psychology and
health in the laboratory and across the population.
Health Psychology: Read More [+]

PSYCH N134 Health Psychology 3 Units

Terms offered: Summer 2018 First 6 Week Session, Summer 2017 Second 6 Week Session, Summer 2016 Second 6 Week Session
This course will provide students with an introduction to Health Psychology. Students will learn about measurement of psychological, behavioral, and biological constructs; incidence and prevalence of psychological and medical disorders; introductions to endocrinology, immunology, and psychophysiology and how these systems are thought to relate psychology to health; as well as
introductions to how science is working to understand psychology and health in the laboratory and across the population.
Health Psychology: Read More [+]

PSYCH 135 Treating Mental Illness: Development, Evaluation, and Dissemination 3 Units

Terms offered: Fall 2016, Spring 2016
Although progress has been made in developing and disseminating evidence-based treatments for most forms of mental illness, there are still huge gaps in our knowledge base. Coverage of serious mental illness with adequate and disseminable intervention strategies is all too limited. Hence, there is a great need for the next generation of clinical scientists to contribute to the mission of treatment development for mental illness. In this course we will learn
about, and critique, treatment development models. We will review the steps in treatment development spanning from the study of mechanisms on to proof of concept and to establishing the feasibility of novel treatment ideas.
Treating Mental Illness: Development, Evaluation, and Dissemination: Read More [+]

PSYCH N135 Treating Mental Illness: Development, Evaluation, and Dissemination 3 Units

Terms offered: Summer 2016 10 Week Session, Summer 2016 Second 6 Week Session
Although progress has been made in developing and disseminating evidence-based treatments for most forms of mental illness, there are still huge gaps in our knowledge base. Coverage of serious mental illness with adequate and disseminable intervention strategies is all too limited. Hence, there is a great need for the next generation of clinical scientists to contribute to the mission of treatment development for
mental illness. In this course we will learn about, and critique, models of psychotherapy. We will review the steps in treatment development spanning from the study of mechanisms on to proof of concept and to establishing the feasibility of novel treatment ideas.
Treating Mental Illness: Development, Evaluation, and Dissemination: Read More [+]

PSYCH 136 Human Sexuality 3 Units

Terms offered: Summer 2018 First 6 Week Session, Summer 2017 First 6 Week Session, Summer 2016 First 6 Week Session
Biological, social, and clinical issues in sexuality. Topics include psychology and physiology of sexual response, new developments in contraception, homosexuality and lesbianism, variations in sexual behavior, gender identity and role, definition and treatment of sexual dysfunction. Approved for state psychology licensing requirement.

Human Sexuality: Read More [+]

PSYCH 137 Mind-Body and Health 3 Units

Terms offered: Summer 2018 Second 6 Week Session
Course explores psychosomatics or mind-body interactions in a dozen diseases/disorders from recurrent ailments (e.g., asthma, gastrointestinal disorders) and chronic diseases (e.g., hypertension) to “terminal” diseases (e.g., cancer, AIDS); also included are specific disorders of appetite, sleep, and sexual functioning. For each of these, (i) symptoms (physical and psychological) are outlined, (ii) epidemiological data are used to illustrate
socio-cultural underpinnings of health, and (iii) etiology examines how emotion, personality, and other psychological variables interact with the biological. Finally, (iv) psychosocial assessment and (v) cognitive-behavioral-affective treatments are presented for each disease/disorder.
Mind-Body and Health: Read More [+]

PSYCH 139 Case Studies in Clinical Psychology 3 Units

Terms offered: Summer 2018 First 6 Week Session, Summer 2017 First 6 Week Session, Summer 2016 Second 6 Week Session
This course is for students who are curious about clinical psychology and who seek to explore real world cases and examples of mental health diagnoses. Through the use of clinical cases and first-person accounts, this course will give an overview of the diagnostic criteria mental health providers use to make diagnoses, and analyze environmental and other causal factors, with
a view to possible treatment options for various mental disorders.
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PSYCH 140 Developmental Psychology 3 Units

Terms offered: Fall 2018, Spring 2018, Fall 2017
This course explores the development of children from birth to adolescence, in a wide range of areas including biological, cognitive, linguistic, social, and personality development. It also covers the effects of genes, experience, and social context on children's development.

Developmental Psychology: Read More [+]

PSYCH N140 Developmental Psychology 3 Units

Terms offered: Summer 2017 Second 6 Week Session, Summer 2016 First 6 Week Session, Summer 2016 Second 6 Week Session
This course explores the development of children from birth to adolescence, in a wide range of areas including biological, cognitive, linguistic, social, and personality development. It also covers the effects of genes, experience, and social context on children's development.

Developmental Psychology: Read More [+]

PSYCH 141 Development During Infancy 3 Units

Terms offered: Spring 2016, Fall 2014, Fall 2013
Cognitive, perceptual, and social development during the first two years of life with emphasis upon methods of observation and experimentation.

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PSYCH 142 Applied Early Developmental Psychology 3 Units

Terms offered: Summer 2018 First 6 Week Session, Spring 2003, Spring 2001
This lecture and small group activity course will examine the development of young children—from the prenatal period to age 8—in the varied contexts in which development occurs. The course is designed to introduce the basic theories and the research approaches that have been used to develop them. We will also explore how the contexts, the influences of environments in which children are growing and living, affect their
development and our understanding of children. We will discuss how this understanding may be different, depending on whether one has studied psychology, neuroscience, education, social welfare, public health, or public policy, and how each contributes to our deeper understanding of children’s healthy development.
Applied Early Developmental Psychology: Read More [+]

PSYCH C143 Language Acquisition 3 Units

Terms offered: Spring 2017, Spring 2016, Spring 2015
An overview of topics and theories in language acquisition: early development of speech perception and production, word learning, generalizing linguistic structure, and differences between first language acquisition, second language acquisition, and bilingualism. We will also compare different theoretical approaches, and address the classic "nature vs. nurture" question by examining both traditional generativist approaches and more
recent usage based models.
Language Acquisition: Read More [+]

PSYCH 144 Emerging Adulthood 3 Units

Terms offered: Fall 2018, Fall 2016, Spring 2016
This course will explore the unique biological, cognitive, social, personality and identity development of individuals aged 18 to 29. As this is an experiential course, students are expected to apply their learning through active engagement in the course material.

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PSYCH 145 Relationships: Development and Clinical Implications of Intimate Ties 3 Units

Terms offered: Summer 2002 10 Week Session, Summer 2001 10 Week Session, Summer 2000 10 Week Session
This lecture course focuses on the close relationships that most individuals – usually, beginning in infancy -- will have formed during their lifetime, as well as the way such relationships can favorably or unfavorably influence an individual’s emotions and affect those of others. From infancy through young adulthood and old age, secure vs. insecure (e.g., ambivalent, avoidant, or unpredictable/frightening)
relationships affect not only an individual’s happiness and general well-being, but also the eventual presence or absence of clinical symptomatology. Favorable vs. unfavorable relationships with parents, peers, close friends and romantic partners will be discussed, together with their consequences for psychological health and overall
Relationships: Development and Clinical Implications of Intimate Ties: Read More [+]

PSYCH 146 Developmental and Biological Processes in Attachment 3 Units

Terms offered: Spring 2017, Spring 2016, Fall 2014
This course on attachment theory provides an integrative (evolutionary/genetic/experiential) approach to studying secure vs. insecure parent-child relationships; their precursors in parental rearing patterns; and favorable vs. unfavorable sequelae. Adult life-history narratives indicative of secure vs. insecure adult attachment have been found associated with care-giving of offspring.

Developmental and Biological Processes in Attachment: Read More [+]

PSYCH 148 Topical Seminars in Developmental Psychology 3 Units

Terms offered: Spring 2018, Fall 2017, Spring 2016
For a precise schedule of offerings, check with the Student Services Office each semester.

Topical Seminars in Developmental Psychology: Read More [+]

PSYCH 149 Early Development & Learning Science Core Seminar 3 Units

Terms offered: Summer 2018 First 6 Week Session, Spring 2009, Fall 1999
This course serves as the foundation to the Early Development & Learning Science minor. It will help students understand how best to promote children’s robust early development and learning, integrating a variety of different perspectives. A wide range of approaches, representing different disciplines—education neuroscience, psychology, public health, public policy, and social work—will be presented by visiting lecturers
to impart key aspects of supporting young children. Each perspective is necessary to understand and integrate with the others to most effectively address the complex problems facing young children and their families today.
Early Development & Learning Science Core Seminar: Read More [+]

PSYCH 149A Early Learning: Engaging Interactions and Environments 3 Units

Terms offered: Summer 2018 First 6 Week Session
A new lecture and practice course designed to increase participants’ knowledge and skills in providing preschool children with high quality early learning experiences. Using the research-based CLASS© tool as a framework, students learn how to engage in more effective teacher-child interactions and create environments that promote young children’s social-emotional and cognitive development. Observation and analysis of classroom practices, through
video recording, enable each student to receive individualized feedback from the instructor, as well as from peers. The focus is on professional growth, including developing abilities to support children’s cultural and linguistic diversity.
Early Learning: Engaging Interactions and Environments: Read More [+]

PSYCH 149C Design Thinking for ED&LS 3 Units

Terms offered: Summer 2018 Second 6 Week Session
This course will teach a human-centered, evidence-based method for finding new ways to solve persistent problems: Design Thinking. Design Thinking is a methodology for collaborative problem solving pioneered at the design firm IDEO and Stanford University to come up with game-changing solutions to difficult problems. As student learners accustomed to taking others’ perspectives and problem solving, we are especially well-suited to use Design
Thinking.

We will be tackling the problem of children’s school readiness. The goal of this class is to find imaginative and practical solutions -- imaginative enough to be exciting and effective for children and families, and practical enough to be able to pilot these solutions during the class.

Design Thinking for ED&LS: Read More [+]

PSYCH 150 Psychology of Personality 3 Units

Terms offered: Fall 2018, Spring 2018, Fall 2017
A consideration of general and systematic issues in the study of personality and an evaluation of major theories and points of view.

Psychology of Personality: Read More [+]

PSYCH N150 Psychology of Personality 3 Units

Terms offered: Summer 2018 First 6 Week Session, Summer 2017 First 6 Week Session, Summer 2016 First 6 Week Session
A consideration of general and systematic issues in the study of personality and an evaluation of major theories and points of view.

Psychology of Personality: Read More [+]

PSYCH 156 Human Emotion 3 Units

Terms offered: Spring 2017, Fall 2013, Summer 2013 First 6 Week Session
This course will examine two different theoretical perspectives on emotion: (1) the differential emotions approach with its strong evolutionary grounding, and (2) the social constructionist approach. Next, the course will investigate empirical research on many facets of emotion including facial expression, physiology, appraisal, and the lexicon of emotion. Finally, we will consider more specific topics including social
interaction, culture, gender, personality, and psychopathology.
Human Emotion: Read More [+]

PSYCH 160 Social Psychology 3 Units

Terms offered: Fall 2017, Spring 2017, Fall 2016
Survey of social psychology including interaction processes, small groups, attitudes and attitude change, and social problems.

Social Psychology: Read More [+]

PSYCH N160 Social Psychology 3 Units

Terms offered: Summer 2018 Second 6 Week Session, Summer 2017 Second 6 Week Session, Summer 2016 Second 6 Week Session
Survey of social psychology including interaction processes, small groups, attitudes and attitude change, and social problems.

Social Psychology: Read More [+]

PSYCH 162 Human Happiness 3 Units

Terms offered: Summer 2011 10 Week Session, Summer 2011 Second 6 Week Session, Summer 2009 Second 6 Week Session
This course will take an interdisciplinary approach to an understanding of happiness. The first part of the course will be devoted to the different treatments of happiness in the world's philosophical traditions, focusing up close on conceptions or the good life in classical Greek and Judeo-Christian thought, the great traditions in East Asian thought (Taoism, Buddhism, Confucianism)
, and ideas about happiness that emerged more recently in the age of Enlightenment. With these different perspectives as a framework, the course will then turn to treatments of happiness in the behavioral sciences, evolutionary scholarship, and neuroscience. Special emphasis will be given to understanding how happiness arises in experiences of the moral emotions, including gratitude, compassion, reverence and awe, as well as aesthetic emotions like humor and beauty.
Human Happiness: Read More [+]

PSYCH C162 Human Happiness 3 Units

Terms offered: Fall 2018, Fall 2017, Spring 2016
This course will take an interdisciplinary approach to an understanding of happiness. The first part of the course will be devoted to the different treatments of happiness in the world's philosophical traditions, focusing up close on conceptions or the good life in classical Greek and Judeo-Christian thought, the great traditions in East Asian thought (Taoism, Buddhism, Confucianism), and ideas about happiness that emerged more recently in the
age of Enlightenment. With these different perspectives as a framework, the course will then turn to treatments of happiness in the behavioral sciences, evolutionary scholarship, and neuroscience. Special emphasis will be given to understanding how happiness arises in experiences of the moral emotions, including gratitude, compassion, reverence and awe, as well as aesthetic emotions like humor and beauty.
Human Happiness: Read More [+]

PSYCH N162 Human Happiness 3 Units

Terms offered: Summer 2014 10 Week Session, Summer 2014 First 6 Week Session
This course will take an interdisciplinary approach to an understanding of happiness. We will first review the different treatments of happiness in the world’s philosophical traditions: conceptions of the good life in classical Greek and Judeo-Christian thought, the great East Asian philosophies, and ideas about happiness that emerged in the age of Enlightenment. With these different perspectives as a framework, the
course will turn to treatments of happiness in the behavioral sciences, evolutionary scholarship, and neuroscience. Special Emphasis will be given to understanding how happiness arises in experiences of the moral emotions, including gratitude, compassion, reverence and awe, and aesthetic emotions like humor and beauty.
Human Happiness: Read More [+]

PSYCH 164 Social Cognition 3 Units

Terms offered: Fall 2015, Spring 2014, Spring 2010
Surveys empirical and theoretical approaches to our understanding of perception, memory, thought, and language concerning ourselves, other people, interpersonal behavior, and the situations in which social interaction takes place. Emphasis is placed on the integration of problems in social, personality, and clinical psychology with the concepts and principles employed in the study of nonsocial cognition.

Social Cognition: Read More [+]

PSYCH 165 Psychology of Creativity 3 Units

Terms offered: Fall 2012, Fall 2010
This is a course on creativity, both at the individual and the group level. We will consider traits of highly creative individuals (vs. less creative individuals) and the ways in which they think. We will also investigate the ways in which influence processes affect individual creativity and will then focus on group creativity, including techniques by which creativity is hindered or stimulated. Finally, we will consider applications from organizations as
we consider cultures in which creativity thrives. Throughout the course, discussion will be encouraged and we will also do some experiential exercises. The course will be a combination of lecture, discussion, and experiential learning.
Psychology of Creativity: Read More [+]

PSYCH 166AC Cultural Psychology 3 Units

Terms offered: Summer 2018 Second 6 Week Session, Summer 2017 Second 6 Week Session, Spring 2017
The course will review research on culture, race, and ethnicity and will consider the implications of these findings for our understanding of race, culture, and ethnicity in American society. Mounting evidence suggests that psychological processes are culture-specific, theory-driven, and context-dependent. This course will focus on the effects that theories of mind, person, self, and social institutions
have on human cognition, motivation, emotion, and social interactions in American society. Students will gain a better appreciation of the ways that cultural traditions and social practices regulate and transform psychological functioning. Simply, the course is about how culture affects psyche and how psyche affects culture.
Cultural Psychology: Read More [+]

PSYCH 167AC Stigma and Prejudice 3 Units

Terms offered: Fall 2018, Spring 2018, Fall 2017
Traditionally, research on prejudice and stereotyping has focused on the psychological mechanisms that lead people to be biased against others. Recent research has begun to shed light on the psychological legacy of prejudice and stereotyping for their targets. This course will review the major contributions of each of these literatures, providing students with a broad understanding of both classic and current issues in the field. The course will
be divided into three sections: bias (i.e., the perpetrator's perspective), stigma (i.e., the target's perspective), and intergroup relations.
Stigma and Prejudice: Read More [+]

PSYCH 168 Topical Seminars in Social Psychology 3 Units

Terms offered: Spring 2017, Spring 2016, Spring 2014
For a precise schedule of offerings check with Student Services Office each semester.

Topical Seminars in Social Psychology: Read More [+]

PSYCH 169 Love & Close Relationships 3 Units

Terms offered: Spring 2018, Fall 2017, Spring 2017
This course will explore the social, biological and neurological attributes of love and close relationships. As this is an experiential course, students are expected to apply their learning through active engagement in the course material.

Love & Close Relationships: Read More [+]

PSYCH 180 Industrial-Organizational Psychology 3 Units

Terms offered: Summer 2013 10 Week Session, Summer 2013 First 6 Week Session, Fall 2005
Primarily for majors. Introduction to the field of industrial psychology, covering fundamental theory and concepts in personnel and social aspects in the field. Concerned with the processes involved in developing and maintaining organizations.

Industrial-Organizational Psychology: Read More [+]

PSYCH N180 Industrial-Organizational Psychology 3 Units

Terms offered: Summer 2018 Second 6 Week Session, Summer 2017 Second 6 Week Session, Summer 2016 Second 6 Week Session
Primarily for majors. Introduction to the field of industrial psychology, covering fundamental theory and concepts in personnel and social aspects in the field. Concerned with the processes involved in developing and maintaining organizations.

Industrial-Organizational Psychology: Read More [+]

PSYCH 190A Early Learning: Engaging Interactions and Environments 3 Units

Terms offered: Fall 2015
A new lecture and practice course designed to increase participants’ knowledge and skills in providing preschool children with high quality early learning experiences. Using the research-based CLASS© tool as a framework, students learn how to engage in more effective teacher-child interactions and create environments that promote young children’s social-emotional and cognitive development. Observation and analysis of classroom practices, through video recording, enable
each student to receive individualized feedback from the instructor, as well as from peers. The focus is on professional growth, including developing abilities to support children’s cultural and linguistic diversity.
Early Learning: Engaging Interactions and Environments: Read More [+]

PSYCH 192 Special Topics in Psychology 3 Units

Terms offered: Fall 2016, Spring 2016, Fall 2013
Course examines current problems and issues in psychology.

Special Topics in Psychology: Read More [+]

PSYCH 192AC Child Development in Different Cultures 3 Units

Terms offered: Summer 2012 10 Week Session, Summer 2012 Second 6 Week Session
This course explores "culture" as a context for development from both global and American sub-group perspectives, through developmental stages from early childhood to adolescence, across physical, social and cognitive domains. It will examine traditional theories and modern systems theories with respect to individual and social contexts, discuss the experience of sub-groups of American children and conclude
with a comprehensive analysis of the development of an individual.
Child Development in Different Cultures: Read More [+]

PSYCH 192P Psychology Post Baccalaureate Capstone 3 Units

Terms offered: Fall 2018, Fall 2017, Spring 2017
The Psychology Post Baccalaureate Program at UC Berkeley is intended to serve as a training program for students who have interest in pursuing graduate degrees in Psychology but who are lacking necessary academic training and research experience. In addition to the required course and lab work, Post Baccalaureate students are required to complete a two-part research learning project, called The Capstone Experience. The Capstone Experience consists
of two components: an applied written submission and a formal research presentation.
Psychology Post Baccalaureate Capstone: Read More [+]

PSYCH H194A Honors Seminar 2 Units

Terms offered: Fall 2018, Fall 2017, Fall 2016
In the fall semester the seminar will concentrate on issues of research design, ethics, and data analysis using statistical packages. The spring semester will focus on oral and written presentations of the thesis projects and feedback on thesis drafts.

Honors Seminar: Read More [+]

PSYCH H194B Honors Seminar 2 Units

Terms offered: Spring 2018, Spring 2017, Spring 2016
In the fall semester the seminar will concentrate on issues of research design, ethics, and data analysis using statistical packages. The spring semester will focus on oral and written presentations of the thesis projects and feedback on thesis drafts.

Honors Seminar: Read More [+]

PSYCH H195A Special Study for Honors Candidates 1 - 3 Units

Terms offered: Fall 2016, Spring 2013, Spring 2012
Independent study and preparation of an honors thesis under the supervision of a faculty member.

Special Study for Honors Candidates: Read More [+]

PSYCH H195B Special Study for Honors Candidates 1 - 3 Units

Terms offered: Fall 2016, Spring 2015, Spring 2013
Independent study and preparation of an honors thesis under the supervision of a faculty member.

Special Study for Honors Candidates: Read More [+]

PSYCH 197 Field Study in Psychology 1 - 3 Units

Terms offered: Spring 2017, Fall 2016, Fall 2015
Supervised experience relevant to specific aspects of psychology in off-campus settings. Individual and/or group meetings with faculty. Enrollment is restricted by regulations of the Berkeley Division listed elsewhere in this catalog.

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PSYCH 198 Directed Group Study 1 - 3 Units

Terms offered: Spring 2018, Spring 2017, Fall 2016
Group study of a selected topic or topics in psychology. Enrollment is restricted by regulations of the Berkeley Division listed elsewhere in this catalog.

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PSYCH 199 Supervised Independent Study and Research 1 - 3 Units

Terms offered: Fall 2016, Summer 2016 10 Week Session, Spring 2016
Enrollment is restricted by regulations of the Berkeley Division listed elsewhere in this catalog.

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PSYCH 205 Data Analysis 3 Units

Terms offered: Spring 2018, Spring 2017, Fall 2015
This course serves both as a refresher for undergraduate statistics and as a preparation for more advanced courses. This course will cover fundamental principles of statistical thinking including probability theory, distributions, modeling, parameter fitting, error estimation, statistical significance and cross-validation. In addition, the course will cover all statistical tests that are part of the generalized mixed effect models: n-way analysis
of variance (ANOVA), multiple regression, analysis of covariance, logistic regression, between subjects, within subjects, mixed designs and designs with random factors. Students will also be introduced to statistical programming using the computer language R.
Data Analysis: Read More [+]

PSYCH 206 Structural Equation Modeling 3 Units

Terms offered: Spring 2017, Spring 2015
This course is intended to provide an introduction to the principles and practice of structural equation modeling, including matrix algebra, LISREL notation, measurement models and confirmatory factor analysis (CFA), path models, and structural models. In addition, we will cover multiple ways to handle longitudinal data (e.g., latent growth and simplex models) and advanced topics such as mediation and latent variable interactions. Data analytic examples
and assignments will come from psychological research applications. Students will be strongly encouraged to incorporate their own data as well.
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PSYCH 210A Proseminar: Cognition, Brain, and Behavior 3 Units

Terms offered: Spring 2018, Fall 2017, Spring 2016
A survey of the field of biological psychology. Areas covered are (a) cognitive neuroscience; (b) biological bases of behavior; (c) sensation and perception (d) learning and memory, (e) thought and language.

Proseminar: Cognition, Brain, and Behavior: Read More [+]

PSYCH 210B Proseminar: Cognition, Brain, and Behavior 3 Units

Terms offered: Fall 2017, Fall 2015, Fall 2013
A survey of the field of biological psychology. Areas covered are (a) cognitive neuroscience; (b) biological bases of behavior; (c) sensation and perception (d) learning and memory, (e) thought and language.

Proseminar: Cognition, Brain, and Behavior: Read More [+]

PSYCH 210C Proseminar: Cognition, Brain, and Behavior 3 Units

Terms offered: Spring 2011, Spring 2010, Spring 2009
A survey of the field of biological psychology. Areas covered are (a) cognitive neuroscience; (b) biological bases of behavior; (c) sensation and perception (d) learning and memory, (e) thought and language.

Proseminar: Cognition, Brain, and Behavior: Read More [+]

PSYCH 210D Proseminar: Cognition, Brain, and Behavior 3 Units

Terms offered: Fall 2014, Fall 2012, Fall 2008
A survey of the field of biological psychology. Areas covered are (a) cognitive neuroscience; (b) biological bases of behavior; (c) sensation and perception (d) learning and memory, (e) thought and language.

Proseminar: Cognition, Brain, and Behavior: Read More [+]

PSYCH 210E Proseminar: Cognition, Brain, and Behavior 3 Units

Terms offered: Fall 2015, Fall 2013, Spring 2013
A survey of the field of biological psychology. Areas covered are (a) cognitive neuroscience; (b) biological bases of behavior; (c) sensation and perception (d) learning and memory, (e) thought and language.

Proseminar: Cognition, Brain, and Behavior: Read More [+]

PSYCH 214 Functional MRI Methods 3 Units

Terms offered: Fall 2016, Fall 2015, Fall 2014
This is a hands-on course teaching the principles of functional MRI (fMRI) data analysis. We will teach you how to work with data and code to get a deeper understanding of how fMRI methods work, how they can fail, how to fix them, and how to develop new methods. We will cover the basic concepts in neuroimaging analysis, and how they relate to the wider world of statistics, engineering and computer science. At the same time we will teach you techniques
of data analysis that will make your work easier to organize, understand, explain and share. At the end of the course we expect you to be able to analyze fMRI data using Python and keep track of your work with version control using git.
Functional MRI Methods: Read More [+]

PSYCH 222 Consciousness 3 Units

Terms offered: Spring 2013, Spring 2011, Spring 2010
Survey of psychological, philosophical, and neuroscientific approaches to consciousness. Introspection. The mind-body problem. Automaticity. Explicit-implicit dissociations in memory, perception, and thought. Implicit emotion and motivation. Sleep and dreams. Anesthesia and coma. Hypnosis. Meditative states. Consciousness in nonhuman animals and computing machines.

Consciousness: Read More [+]

PSYCH C223 Proseminar: Problem Solving and Understanding 3 Units

Terms offered: Spring 2018, Spring 2016, Spring 2015, Fall 2013, Spring 2011
Students will examine problem solving in children and adults, from a predominantly cognitive science perspective, beginning with an examination of thinking involved in diverse problem types. Students will then analyze the literature concerning cognitive issues that transcend problem types, including representation, "understanding," access and availability of knowledge, access to one's own cognitive processing
, categorization, the architecture of knowledge, and the control of cognition.
Proseminar: Problem Solving and Understanding: Read More [+]

PSYCH 229 Cognition, Brain, and Behavior Colloquium 1 Unit

Terms offered: Spring 2015, Fall 2014, Spring 2014
Reports and discussions of original research in the area of cognitive psychology. Not all participants must report in any given semester, but all are expected to attend and to enter into the discussions. Required course for all students in the cognition, brain, and behavior graduate program.

Cognition, Brain, and Behavior Colloquium: Read More [+]

PSYCH 229A Cognition Colloquium 1 Unit

Terms offered: Fall 2018, Spring 2018, Fall 2017
Reports and discussions of original research in the area of cognitive psychology, by guest speakers, UCB faculty, and graduate students. Topics change depending on the speaker. Not all participants must report in any given semester, but all are expected to attend and to enter into the discussions. Required course for all students in the cognition area graduate program.

Cognition Colloquium: Read More [+]

PSYCH 229B Cognitive Neuroscience Colloquium 1 Unit

Terms offered: Fall 2018, Spring 2018, Fall 2017
Reports and discussions of original research in the area of cognitive neuroscience by guest speakers, UCB faculty, and graduate students. Topics will vary depending on the speaker. Not all participants must report in any given semester, but all are expected to attend and to enter into the discussions. Required course for all students in the cognitive neuroscience area graduate program.

Cognitive Neuroscience Colloquium: Read More [+]

PSYCH 230 Proseminar: Clinical Psychology 3 Units

Terms offered: Fall 2018, Fall 2017, Fall 2016
This course is a review of the history and theory of the field of clinical psychology. The course covers adult and child psychopathology, ethnic minority mental health, culture, and community influences.

Proseminar: Clinical Psychology: Read More [+]

PSYCH 231 Clinical Neuroscience 2 Units

Terms offered: Spring 2015, Fall 2014
This course examines how psychology, neuroscience, pharmacology, and medicine come together to understand psychiatric and neurological disorders, and through this understanding, develop and deliver evidence-based treatments. Class format consists of attending patient care clinics, lectures, paper reviews and class discussions.

Clinical Neuroscience: Read More [+]

PSYCH 232 History, Systems, and Diversity in Psychology 1 Unit

Terms offered: Fall 2018, Spring 2000, Spring 1997
The overall goal of the course is to enhance your critical thinking and your knowledge of the historical views in clinical psychology. One of the concerns about United States psychology theory and research historically has been a focus on Eurocentric ideas and contributions. Accordingly, several weeks of this class will be focused on enriching your understanding of some key perspectives on diversity in psychology.

History, Systems, and Diversity in Psychology: Read More [+]

PSYCH 233A Clinical Assessment: Theory, Application, and Practicum 3 Units

Terms offered: Spring 2018, Spring 2016, Spring 2013
The clinical interview and principles and methods of intellectual, objective, and projective clinical assessment. Readings, discussion, and supervised experience in clinical assessment. The first semester will focus on adult assessments; the second semester will focus on child/adolescent assessments. Required of all clinical students.

Clinical Assessment: Theory, Application, and Practicum: Read More [+]

PSYCH 233B Clinical Assessment: Theory, Application, and Practicum 3 Units

Terms offered: Spring 2017, Spring 2015, Spring 2012
The clinical interview and principles and methods of intellectual, objective, and projective clinical assessment. Readings, discussion, and supervised experience in clinical assessment. The first semester will focus on adult assessments; the second semester will focus on child/adolescent assessments. Required of all clinical students.

Clinical Assessment: Theory, Application, and Practicum: Read More [+]

PSYCH 234D Theories of Cognitive Behavior Therapy 3 Units

Terms offered: Fall 2018, Fall 2016, Fall 2013
Central features of cognitive behavior therapy; basics of several cognitive-behavioral theories; evidence of efficacy and effectiveness of methods; methods for assessing, conceptualizing and treating patients; theories, methods, and efficacy evidence for several disorders, primarily anxiety and affective disorders.

Theories of Cognitive Behavior Therapy: Read More [+]

PSYCH 235 Clinical Research 3 Units

Terms offered: Fall 2016, Fall 2014, Fall 2013
Strategies of research in clinical issues; clinical methods of gathering and interpreting data; case examples from the research in progress of participants in the seminar.

Clinical Research: Read More [+]

PSYCH 236 Specialty Clinic 3 Units

Terms offered: Fall 2018, Spring 2018, Fall 2017
A Specialty Clinic is offered to graduate students in the Clinical Science program. Each course combines didactics and hands-on clinical work. Students in the course work with the instructor to develop the topic of interest by reviewing the empirical literature, defining and developing an intervention/consultation, defining a clinical population, marketing and delivering the intervention/consultation, and evaluating the effectiveness of the intervention/consultation.
A number of readings are included in the course, and class discussion is a central part of the course. Written products are also a part of the course, either in the form of a presentation or publication of findings from the clinic. A Specialty Clinic also includes its own Case Conference and supervisors to handle supervision of the clinical cases.
Specialty Clinic: Read More [+]

PSYCH 237E Professional Development in Clinical Science 3 Units

Terms offered: Fall 2018, Spring 2018, Fall 2017
Issues in decisions about providing psychological services to individuals, families, groups and social systems.

Professional Development in Clinical Science: Read More [+]

PSYCH 237F Intervention: Couples Therapy 1 Unit

Terms offered: Fall 2012, Fall 2011, Fall 2010
Psychological intervention with couples.

Intervention: Couples Therapy: Read More [+]

PSYCH 237G Intervention: Specialty Clinics 1 or 2 Units

Terms offered: Fall 2018, Spring 2018, Fall 2017
Psychological intervention with and evaluation of specially designated populations.

Intervention: Specialty Clinics: Read More [+]

PSYCH 237H Intervention: Introduction to Clinical Methods 3 Units

Terms offered: Spring 2018, Spring 2017, Spring 2016
This course is an introduction to clinical methods in preparation for the clinical practicum in the Psychology Clinic during the second and third years of the clinical graduate program. Topics covered include clinical policies and procedures, legal and ethical issues, risk management, standards of care, HIPAA, and consultations.

Intervention: Introduction to Clinical Methods: Read More [+]

PSYCH 239 Clinical Seminar 1 Unit

Terms offered: Fall 2018, Spring 2018, Fall 2017
Reports and discussions of original research in the area of clinical psychology. Not all participants need report in any given semester, but all are expected to attend and to enter into the discussions. Required course for all students in the clinical graduate program.

Clinical Seminar: Read More [+]

PSYCH 240A Proseminar: Biological, Cognitive, and Language Development 3 Units

Terms offered: Spring 2018, Spring 2016, Fall 2013
Survey of the biology of the nervous system and behavior; the cellular interactions during development in animals and humans, including neurogenesis, synaptogenesis, cell death and synapse elimination; and the genetic and experiential determinants of neural development. Exploration of the origins and development of knowledge from infancy through childhood; the development of children's concepts across multiple domains including physics, biology
, math, and psychology. Survey of facts and theories of language acquisition; focus on what learners acquire and the role of input in the process; review of phonology, syntax, and morphology.
Proseminar: Biological, Cognitive, and Language Development: Read More [+]

PSYCH 240B Proseminar: Emotional, Social, and Psychopathological Development 3 Units

Terms offered: Fall 2017, Fall 2016, Spring 2015
Survey of current research and theory on the origins and maintenance of normal and pathological socioemotional development in infancy. Exploration of biological, psychological, familial, and cultural factors affecting social and emotional development through childhood and adolescence. Focus of the course includes how normal or pathological trajectories are maintained in some children, while others shift into or out of clinically diagnosable
disorders.
Proseminar: Emotional, Social, and Psychopathological Development: Read More [+]

PSYCH 249 Developmental Colloquium 1 Unit

Terms offered: Fall 2018, Spring 2018, Fall 2017
Reports and discussions of original research in the area of developmental psychology. Not all participants need report in any given semester, but all are expected to attend and to enter into the discussions. Required course for all students in the developmental graduate program.

Developmental Colloquium: Read More [+]

PSYCH 250A Perspectives in Personality: Overview 3 Units

Terms offered: Fall 2018, Fall 2017, Fall 2016
Introduces the perspectives and research programs of the personality faculty to graduate students having an interest in their field. Each week, attention is directed to the work of a different faculty member associated with the personality program.

Perspectives in Personality: Overview: Read More [+]

PSYCH 250B Perspectives in Personality: Trends and Issues 3 Units

Terms offered: Spring 2018, Spring 2016, Spring 2014
Considers historical trends and current discussions regarding such topics as (1) the concept of disposition; (2) person by environment transactions; (3) observational assessment of persons; (4) personality systematics; (5) personality development and concepts of structure, and (6) formulations of personality system-social system interactions.

Perspectives in Personality: Trends and Issues: Read More [+]

PSYCH 250C Proseminar: Social Cognition 3 Units

Terms offered: Spring 2014, Fall 2012, Spring 2010
Surveys empirical and theoretical approaches to our understanding of perception, memory, thought, and language concerning ourselves, other people, interpersonal behavior, and the situations in which social interaction takes place. Emphasis is placed on the integration of problems in social, personality, and clinical psychology with the concepts and principles employed in the study of nonsocial cognition.

Proseminar: Social Cognition: Read More [+]

PSYCH 250D Principles and Pragmatics of Personality Measurement 3 Units

Terms offered: Spring 2016, Spring 2014, Fall 2013
Methods of personality measurement and assessment, with particular attention to the qualities, attributes, talents and dispositions considered in the everyday evaluations people make of self and others.

Principles and Pragmatics of Personality Measurement: Read More [+]

PSYCH 259 Personality Seminar 1 Unit

Terms offered: Fall 2018, Spring 2018, Fall 2017
Reports and discussions of original research in the area of personality psychology. Not all participants need report in any given semester, but all are expected to attend and to enter into the discussions. Required course for all students in the personality graduate program.

Personality Seminar: Read More [+]

PSYCH 269 Social Seminar 1 Unit

Terms offered: Fall 2018, Spring 2018, Fall 2017
Reports and discussion of original research in the area of social psychology. Not all participants need report in any given semester, but all are expected to attend and to enter into the discussions. Required for all students in the social graduate program.

Social Seminar: Read More [+]

PSYCH 290B Seminars: Biological 2 Units

Terms offered: Spring 2018, Fall 2017, Spring 2017

Seminars: Biological: Read More [+]

PSYCH 290E Seminars: Perception 2 Units

Terms offered: Fall 2018, Spring 2016, Fall 2009

Seminars: Perception: Read More [+]

PSYCH 290H Seminars: Developmental 2 Units

Terms offered: Fall 2018, Fall 2017, Spring 2017

Seminars: Developmental: Read More [+]

PSYCH 290I Seminars: Personality 2 Units

Terms offered: Spring 2017, Spring 2015, Fall 2014

Seminars: Personality: Read More [+]

PSYCH 290J Seminars: Social 2 Units

Terms offered: Fall 2017, Fall 2016, Fall 2015

Seminars: Social: Read More [+]

PSYCH 290K Seminars: Clinical 2 Units

Terms offered: Fall 2015, Spring 2015, Fall 2014

Seminars: Clinical: Read More [+]

PSYCH 290P Seminars: Additional Seminars on Special Topics to Be Announced 2 Units

Terms offered: Spring 2013, Fall 2012, Spring 2011

Seminars: Additional Seminars on Special Topics to Be Announced: Read More [+]

PSYCH 290Q Seminars: Cognition 2 Units

Terms offered: Spring 2018, Fall 2017, Spring 2017

Seminars: Cognition: Read More [+]

PSYCH 290Z Seminars 1 - 3 Units

Terms offered: Fall 2018, Spring 2018, Fall 2017
Special section.

Seminars: Read More [+]

PSYCH 292 Introduction to the Profession of Psychology 2 Units

Terms offered: Fall 2018, Fall 2017, Fall 2016
This course provides both a broad review of the field of psychology and an introduction to the faculty of this department. Faculty from various program areas will present biographical information and discuss their particular research programs, as well as summarizing current developments in their areas. The course will also cover topics in professional development (e.g., scientific writing, convention presentations, journal review processes, professional
and scientific ethics, and special issues facing women and minority psychologists). Required of all first-year students in the graduate program.
Introduction to the Profession of Psychology: Read More [+]

PSYCH 293 Second-Year Seminar on Professional Development 2 Units

Terms offered: Spring 2018, Spring 2017, Spring 2016
This course will focus on various issues related to professional development. Topics may include planning a research program, preparing for qualifying exams, choosing a dissertation committee, identifying career options, presenting work at conferences and in journals, preparing grant proposals, preparing for job interviews, juggling professional and personal life, and recognizing obstacles in career development. The seminar participants will
select actual topics at the beginning of the term, and all will be expected to participate in the discussions. All participants will present their research at a departmental poster session at the end of the term. Required of all second-year students.
Second-Year Seminar on Professional Development: Read More [+]

PSYCH 294 Current Issues Colloquium Series 1 Unit

Terms offered: Fall 2018, Spring 2018, Fall 2017
Current issues in specified areas of psychology presented weekly by announced speakers.

Current Issues Colloquium Series: Read More [+]

PSYCH 298 Directed Study 1 - 12 Units

Terms offered: Fall 2018, Spring 2018, Fall 2017
Special study under the direction of a member of the staff.

Directed Study: Read More [+]

PSYCH 299 Research 1 - 12 Units

Terms offered: Fall 2018, Fall 2017, Summer 2017 8 Week Session
Individual research.

Research: Read More [+]

PSYCH 301 Supervision for Teaching Psychology 2 2 Units

Terms offered: Spring 2016, Fall 2015, Spring 2015
Supervised teaching experience for graduate student instructors of Psych 2.

Supervision for Teaching Psychology 2: Read More [+]

PSYCH 375 Teaching Psychology 2 Units

Terms offered: Fall 2018, Fall 2017, Fall 2016
This course will provide training in a variety of teaching techniques, will review relevant pedagogical issues, and will assist graduate students in mastering their initial teaching experiences.

Teaching Psychology: Read More [+]

PSYCH 401A Clinical Internship (Off Campus) 1 - 12 Units

Terms offered: Fall 2010, Fall 2009, Fall 2008
Individual programs of practice and supervision in approved off-campus agencies.

Clinical Internship (Off Campus): Read More [+]

PSYCH 401B Clinical Internship (Off Campus) 1 - 12 Units

Terms offered: Spring 2014, Spring 2013, Spring 2012
Individual programs of practice and supervision in approved off-campus agencies.

Clinical Internship (Off Campus): Read More [+]

PSYCH 602 Individual Study for Doctoral Students 1 - 8 Units

Terms offered: Spring 2014, Spring 2013, Spring 2012
Individual study in consultation with the major field adviser, intended to provide opportunity for qualified students to prepare themselves for the various examinations required of candidates for the Ph.D. May not be used for unit or residence requirements for the doctoral degree.

Individual Study for Doctoral Students: Read More [+]

Faculty and Instructors

+ Indicates this faculty member is the recipient of the Distinguished Teaching Award.

Faculty

Ozlem Ayduk, Professor. Violence, developmental psychology, psychology, depression, self-control, emotion regulation, social-cognition in interpersonal relationships.
Research Profile

Sonia Bishop, Associate Professor.

Silvia Bunge, Professor. Cognition, human brain function, development.
Research Profile

Joseph J. Campos, Professor. Social-emotional development in infancy, emotional communication, perception of emotion, relation of motor development to cognitive and social and emotional development.
Research Profile

Serena Chen, Professor. Close relationships, social cognition, social psychology, Self and identity, relational self, collective self, social power.
Research Profile

Michael Cole, Associate Adjunct Professor.

Anne Collins, Assistant Professor. Human learning, decision-making and executive functions; Computational modeling at multiple levels (cognitive and neuroscience); Behavioral, EEG, drug and genes studies in healthy or patient populations.Human learning, decision-making and executive functions; Computational modeling at multiple levels (cognitive and neuroscience); Behavioral, EEG, drug and genes studies in healthy or patient populations.
Research Profile

Mark T. D'Esposito, Professor. Cognitive neuroscience, psychology, working memory, frontal lobe function, functional MRI, neurology, brain imaging, dopamine.
Research Profile

Aaron Fisher, Assistant Professor. Anxiety, depression, personalized medicine, psychotherapy, psychophysiology.
Research Profile

David Foster, Acting Associate Professor. Behavioral and Systems Neuroscience , keywords: behavioral neurophysiology of spatial learning and memory; hippocampal replay; computational models of reinforcement learning and navigation.

Jack L. Gallant, Professor. Vision science, form vision, attention, fMRI, computational neuroscience, natural scene perception, brain encoding, brain decoding.
Research Profile

Alison Gopnik, Professor. Learning, philosophy, psychology, cognitive development, theory of mind, young children, children's causal knowledge, Bayes Net formalism.
Research Profile

Tom Griffiths, Professor. Machine learning, computational models of human cognition, Bayesian statistics, cultural evolution.
Research Profile

Allison Harvey, Professor. Sleep, insomnia, comorbidity, bipolar disorder, cognition and emotion.
Research Profile

Erik David Hesse, Associate Adjunct Professor.

Stephen Hinshaw, Professor. Psychology, child clinical, developmental psychopathology, risk factors for attentional, conduct disorders, child psychopharmacology, multimodality interventions, diagnostic validity of disorders, peer relationships, stigma of mental illness.
Research Profile

Rich Ivry, Professor. Cognitive neuroscience, behavior, cognition, brain, attention, coordination, psychology, motor and perceptual processes in normal and neurologically impaired populations, temporal processing, executive control.
Research Profile

Lucia F. Jacobs, Professor. Cognitive and brain evolution, adaptive patterns in spatial memory, spatial navigation, cognitive sex differences and decision making.
Research Profile

Oliver P. John, Professor. Research methods, personality, measurement, emotion regulation, personality structure, personality development, traits, Big Five model, individual differences, emotion expression, self-concept, accuracy, bias, self-knowledge, personality assessment.
Research Profile

Sheri Johnson, Professor. Bipolar disorder, social dominance.
Research Profile

Dacher Keltner, Professor. Culture, conflict, behavior, love, psychology, emotion, social interaction, individual differences in emotion, negotiation, embarrassment, desire, juvenile delinquency, laughter, anger, social perception, negotiating morality.
Research Profile

John F. Kihlstrom, Professor. Personality, behavior, memory, psychology, cognition in personal, social contexts, unconscious mental processes, hypnosis, social cognition, experimental psychopathology, health cognition, unconscious mental life.
Research Profile

Robert Thomas Knight, Professor. Cognitive neuroscience, language, physiology, memory, attention, psychology, working memory, neuropsychology, human prefrontal cortex, neural mechanisms of cognitive processing, sensory gating, sustained attention, ad novelty detection.
Research Profile

Lance Kriegsfeld, Professor. NeuroendocrinologyCircadian Biology, Neuroimmunology, cancer biology, animal behavior.
Research Profile

Ann M. Kring, Professor. Schizophrenia, emotion, gender, mental illness, psychology, psychopathology, emotion in social interaction, emotion and cognition, facial expression.
Research Profile

Robert W. Levenson, Professor. Aging, gender, culture, brain, psychology, emotion, psychophysiology, marriage, clinical science, interpersonal interactions, dementia, relationships, neurodegenerative disease.
Research Profile

Tania Lombrozo, Associate Professor.

Mary Main, Professor.

Iris Mauss, Associate Professor. Social psychology, personality psychology, affective science, psychophysiology, individual differences, emotion, emotion regulation, health psychology, happiness, well-being, psychological health.
Research Profile

Rodolfo Mendoza-Denton, Professor. Diversity, intergroup relations, education, prejudice, stigma.
Research Profile

Jason Okonofua, Assistant Professor. Mindsets; Large-scale psychological intervention; Relationships, Stereotyping, Prejudice, Stigma, Education, Interactional Justice; School-to-prison pipeline.

Mahesh Srinivasan, Assistant Professor. Development, Language development, cognition.

Claude Steele, Professor.

Frank J. Sulloway, Adjunct Professor.

Frederic Theunissen, Professor. Behavior, cognition, brain, psychology, birdsong, vocal learning, audition, neurophysiology, speech perception, computational neuroscience, theoretical neuroscience.
Research Profile

Matthew P. Walker, Professor. Plasticity, learning, memory, fMRI, emotion, sleep, EEG.
Research Profile

Joni Wallis, Professor. Prefrontal cortex, neurophysiology, executive control, decision making.
Research Profile

David Whitney, Professor. Cognitive neuroscience, cognition, attention, visual perception, vision, visually guided action.
Research Profile

Linda Wilbrecht, Associate Professor. Neuroscience, addiction, early life adversity, adolescence.
Research Profile

Fei Xu, Professor. Conceptual development, developmental psychology, cognitive development, language development, social cognition in infants and children, learning in infants and young children, statistical learning and statistical inference, psychology and philosophy, computational models of cognitive development.
Research Profile

Qing Zhou, Associate Professor. Culture, family, child development, developmental psychopathology, immigrants.
Research Profile

Emeritus Faculty

+ Martin V. Covington, Professor Emeritus.

Carolyn Pape Cowan, Professor Emeritus. Child development, psychology, couple relationships, parenting styles, family transitions, preventive intervention.
Research Profile

+ Philip Cowan, Professor Emeritus. Couple relationships, family factors in children's development, parenting, fatherhood, preventive intervention with families.
Research Profile

Karen K. De Valois, Professor Emeritus. Psychophysics and electrophysiology of color vision, spatial vision and visual motion.
Research Profile

Susan M. Ervin-Tripp, Professor Emeritus. Sociolinguistics, psychologist, pragmatics, child language, bilingualism.
Research Profile

+ Stephen E. Glickman, Professor Emeritus. Animal behavior, physiological substrates of behavior, hormonal substrates, spotted hyenas, sexual differentiation, vertebrate behavior.
Research Profile

Ervin R. Hafter, Professor Emeritus.

Ravenna M. Helson, Professor Emeritus. Personality, psychology, adult development, psychology of women, creativity, enduring affective-cognitive styles, life choices, roles, retirement, changes in the self, the development of wisdom, gender issues.
Research Profile

Jonas Langer, Professor Emeritus.

+ Christina Maslach, Professor Emeritus. Health psychology, individuation, burnout and job stress.
Research Profile

+ Gerald A. Mendelsohn, Professor Emeritus.

Charlan Jeanne Nemeth, Professor Emeritus. Decision making, jury decision making, influence and persuasion, creativity in small groups, managing innovation in organizations, psychology of creative scientists and entrepreneurs, corporate cultures, diversity of team members, brainstorming, psychology and law.
Research Profile

Stephen E. Palmer, Professor Emeritus. Psychology, visual perception, visual processing.
Research Profile

Kaiping Peng, Professor Emeritus. Psychology, East Asian studies, social cultural sychology, reasoning and judgment across cultures and domains, inter-ethnic, racial relations, cross-cultural communication and understanding.
Research Profile

William Prinzmetal, Adjunct Professor Emeritus. Behavior, cognition, brain, attention, psychology, visual perception.
Research Profile

Donald A. Riley, Professor Emeritus. Behavior, learning, memory, cognition, brain, psychology.
Research Profile

Lynn C. Robertson, Adjunct Professor Emeritus. Cognitive neuroscience, attention, psychology, representations of objects and space, visual search, binding mechanisms, perceptual organization in normal and neurological populations, functional hemisphere asymmetries, spatial deficits.
Research Profile

Eleanor Rosch, Professor Emeritus. Cognition, psychology, concepts, Eastern psychologies, psychologies of religion, cross cultural, causality.
Research Profile

Arthur P. Shimamura, Professor Emeritus. Cognitive neuroscience, behavior, cognition, brain, psychology, frontal lobe function, basic memory research.
Research Profile

Dan I. Slobin, Professor Emeritus. Sociolinguistics, behavior, cognition, brain, psycholinguistics, psychology, language and cognitive development, sign language, cross-cultural.
Research Profile

Anne Treisman, Professor Emeritus.

John S. Watson, Professor Emeritus. Psychology, development in infancy, evolution of psychological processes in artificial life.
Research Profile

+ Rhona Weinstein, Professor Emeritus. Community psychology, educational inequality and the achievement gap, teacher expectations and self-fulfilling prophecies, classroom and school reform.
Research Profile

Sheldon Zedeck, Professor Emeritus. Statistics, organization, psychology, research methodology, industrial, social psychology, personnel, cross-cultural work values, decision-making research, work and family issues, the work values of Chinese employees.
Research Profile

Irving Zucker, Professor Emeritus. Biological rhythms, seasonality, behavioral endocrinology, melatonin, suprachiasmatic nucleus, reproductive physiology, behavior, ultradian rhythms, sex differences.
Research Profile

Contact Information

Department of Psychology

3210 Tolman Hall

Phone: 510-642-5292

Fax: 510-642-5293

Visit Department Website

Department Chair

Ann Kring, PhD

3210 Tolman Hall

kring@berkeley.edu

Department Vice Chair

Serena Chen, PhD

3419 Tolman Hall

serchen@berkeley.edu

Department Vice Chair

Lance Kriegsfeld, PhD

3139 Tolman Hall

kriegsfeld@berkeley.edu

Student Services Director

Harumi Quinones

3313 Tolman Hall

Phone: 510-642-7097

harumi@berkeley.edu

Graduate Student Services Adviser

John Schindel

3318 Tolman Hall

Phone: 510-642-1382

jschindel@berkeley.edu

Undergraduate Student Services Adviser

Emilie Dandan

3305 Tolman Hall

Phone: 510-643-8114

ebdandan@berkeley.edu

Undergraduate Student Services Adviser

Christine Mullarkey

3305 Tolman Hall

Phone: 510-643-8114

cmullarkey@berkeley.edu

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