Psychology MBB Tracks
The psychology concentration offers two MBB tracks: Cognitive Neuroscience (available to members of the classes of 2007 or earlier years) and Psychology and Neuroscience (available to all students).
Contact Information
Website: Psychology
Advising:
Prof. Jason Mitchell, jmitchel@wjh.harvard.edu
Laura Chivers, lchivers@wjh.harvard.edu
Current psychology concentrators interested in learning more about the psychology track of MBB should talk to their concentration advisor in their house, which can be found at http://www.wjh.harvard.edu/psych/ug/advising/CA.html. Prospective psychology concentrators can either talk to the psychology concentration advisor in their house, available at http://www.wjh.harvard.edu/psych/ug/advising/CA.html, or contact Laura Chivers, the Advising Administrator in the Psychology Undergraduate Office at lchivers@wjh.harvard.edu. Additionally, students are welcome to speak to our Assistant Head Tutor, Shelley Carson, who holds weekly advising hours on a walk-in basis in William James Hall 218. Her hours can be found on the Psychology Undergraduate website at http://www.wjh.harvard.edu/psych/ug/advising/PreConc.html.
The Intellectual Basis
The intersection between psychology and mind/brain/behavior is concerned with how mental capacities -- such as memory, perception, mental imagery, and language -- arise from brain function. Thus, studies in the psychology MBB tracks involve studying mechanisms that ultimately produce cognition and behavior. Therefore, students and scholars in these areas study both the brain and behavior. These researchers work at two levels of analysis. Some try to understand mental capacities by delineating sets of component processes and the ways in which they work together; these processes typically are identified with the operation of rather large sets of neurons in specific brain regions. Such theories typically are tested by using brain-scanning techniques, observing selective deficits in cognition and behavior following brain damage, and by studying information processing in special populations (e.g., patients with diseases that affect the brain). Others study the nature of the specific neural microcircuits in a given brain region. These researchers study nonhuman animals to gain insights into the neural bases of perception, memory, and cognition and some construct detailed models that implement specific theories of how the brain gives rise to mental capacities. Computer simulation models, often using bneural networkb designs, are used, but the models tend to be more tightly tied to precise properties of neurons when they are used to understand the operation of specific microcircuits than when they are used to understand the interactions of large sets of neurons working in concert. In short, "psychology MBB" is highly interdisciplinary but focuses at its core on the relation of the brain to cognition and behavior.