Level 1
- PS 1007 - INTRODUCTORY PSYCHOLOGY A
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- Credit Points
- 20
- Course Coordinator
- Dr M Mon-Williams
Pre-requisites
None
Overview
This course introduces Psychology as the science of behaviour and mental processes by looking at knowledge gained from experiments and surveys across selected areas (Biological psychology, Developmental psychology, Memory), examining theoretical models and discussing the methodology used. There is a concurrent practical course consisting of experiments and demonstrations in large groups, computer-based experiments and computer-aided learning modules, and sessions when students are participants in experiments conducted by senior students and researchers in the School. Assessment consists of demonstrating an ability to discuss and reproduce key terms and concepts, and completing multiple-choice answer questions from materials presented in lectures, practicals and the prescribed textbook.
Structure
3 one-hour lectures (Monday, Tuesday and Thursday at 2 pm) and one lab session (up to two-hours at times to be arranged) per week.
Assessment
1st Attempt: 1 one-hour written examination paper (70%) and in-course assessment (30%).
- PS 1507 - INTRODUCTORY PSYCHOLOGY B
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- Credit Points
- 20
- Course Coordinator
- Dr M Mon-Williams
Pre-requisites
Overview
This course continues showing Psychology as the science of behaviour and mental processes by looking at knowledge gained from experiments and surveys across several more areas (Consciousness, Health psychology, Emotion, Social psychology, Perception), examining theoretical models and discussing the methodology used. There is a concurrent practical course consisting of experiments and demonstrations in large groups, computer-based experiments and computer-aided learning modules, and sessions when students are participants in experiments conducted by senior students and researchers in the School. Assessment consists of demonstrating an ability to discuss and reproduce key terms and concepts, and completing multiple-choice answer questions from material presented in lectures, practicals and the prescribed textbook.
Structure
12 week course - 3 one-hour lectures (Monday, Tuesday Thursday at 2 pm) and one lab session (up to two-hours at times to be arranged) per week.
Assessment
1st Attempt: 1 one-hour written examination paper (70%) and in-course assessment (30%).
Level 2
- PS 2009 - ADVANCED PSYCHOLOGY A
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- Credit Points
- 30
- Course Coordinator
- Dr D Pearson
Pre-requisites
PS 1006 or PS 1007 and PS 1506 or PS 1507. This course may not be included in a minimum curriculum with PS 2010.
Notes
Available only to students in Programme Year 2.
Overview
Perception; Aging and Individual Differences; Behavioural Neuroscience; Quantitative methods.
Structure
12 week course - 4 lectures per week and 1 lab session (practical and/or SPSS workshop) per week.
Assessment
1st Attempt: 1 two-hour written examination paper (70%) and in-course assessment (30%).
- PS 2010 - PSYCHOLOGY FOR NEUROSCIENCE AND SPORTS STUDIES A
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- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- Dr D Pearson
Pre-requisites
PS 1006 or PS 1007 and PS 1506 or PS 1507. This course cannot be included in a minimum curriculum with PS 2009.
Notes
This course is available only to students registered for degrees in Neuroscience or Sports Studies.
Overview
Perception; Quantitive Methods.
Structure
12 week course - 2 lectures per week and 1 laboratory session (practical and/or SPSS Workshop) per fortnight.
Assessment
1st Attempt: 1 one-hour examination paper (70%) and in-course assessment (30%).
- PS 2509 - ADVANCED PSYCHOLOGY B
-
- Credit Points
- 30
- Course Coordinator
- Dr D Pearson
Pre-requisites
PS 1006 or PS 1007 or PS 1506 or PS 1507 and PS 2009. This course may not be included in a minimum curriculum with PS 2510.
Notes
Available only to students in Programme Year 2.
Overview
Developmental; Cognition; Organisational psychology; Social Psychology.
Structure
12 week course - 4 lectures per week and 1 lab session (practical and/or SPSS Workshop).
Assessment
1st Attempt: 1 two-hour written examination paper (70%) and in-course assessment (30%).
- PS 2510 - PSYCHOLOGY FOR NEUROSCIENCE AND SPORTS STUDIES B
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- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- Dr D Pearson
Pre-requisites
PS 1006 or PS 1007, PS 1506 or PS 1507 and PS 2010. This course may not be included in a minimum curriculum with PS 2509.
Notes
This course is available only to students registered for degrees in Neuroscience or Sports Studies.
Overview
Organizational psychology; Social psychology.
Structure
12 week course - 2 lectures per week and 1 laboratory session (practical and/or SPSS Workshop) per fortnight.
Assessment
1st Attempt: 1 one-hour examination paper (70%) and in-course assessment (30%).
Level 3
- PS 3009 - METHODOLOGY A
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- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- Dr C Gray
Pre-requisites
PS 1006 or PS 1007, PS 1506 or PS 1507, PS 2009, PS 2509 and permission of Head of School.
Notes
This course can only be taken by students pursuing an Honours Degree programme in Psychology.
Overview
The purpose of this course is to equip students with the skills and knowledge needed to carry out and evaluate psychological research. It consists of lectures on data analysis (especially various models of the analysis of variance) and examples of specific research methodologies, as well as statistical and data exploration exercises using the statistical package SPSS for Windows. Students also work together in small groups under staff supervision on a practical project for which a full report (counting as the in-course assessment component of the course) is required.
Structure
12 week course - 1 lecture, 1 SPSS practical and 4 laboratory sessions per week.
Assessment
1st Attempt: 1 ninety minute written examination paper (70%) and in-course assessment (30%).
- PS 3011 - PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSESSMENT
-
- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- Dr L Phillips
Pre-requisites
PS 1006 or PS 1007, PS 1506 or PS 1507, PS 2009 and PS 2509.
Co-requisites
PS 3012 and PS 3013.
Notes
This course can only be taken by students pursuing an Honours or Designated Degree Programme in Psychology.
Overview
Outline and evaluation of various methods of psychological assessment including issues relating to their application.
Structure
12 week course - 1 one-hour lecture per week and one workshop every four weeks.
Assessment
1st Attempt: 1 ninety minute examination, (75%) and in-course assessment (25%).
- PS 3012 - PERCEPTION
-
- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- Dr A Sahraie
Pre-requisites
PS 1006 or PS 1007, PS 1506 or PS 1507, PS 2009 or PS2010, PS 2509 or PS 2510.
Co-requisites
(Except Neuroscience students): PS 3013, PS 3011.
Notes
This course can only be taken by students pursuing an Honours or Designated Degree Programme in Psychology or an Honours or Designated Degree Programme in Neuroscience.
Overview
Theories and data relating to the normal and abnormal processing of visual attributes such as colour, motion, spatial structure and depth. Retinal and cortical structures for visual perception.
Structure
12 week course - 1 lecture per week and one workshop every four weeks.
Assessment
1st Attempt: 1 ninety minute examination (75%) and in-course assessment (25%).
- PS 3013 - NEUROPSYCHOLOGY
-
- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- Dr M Milders
Pre-requisites
PS1006 or PS 1007, PS1506 or PS 1507, PS2009 or PS2010, PS2509 or PS2510.
Co-requisites
(except Neuroscience students): PS3011, PS3012
Notes
This course can only be taken by students pursuing an Honours or Designated Degree Programme in Psychology or an Honours or Designated Degree Programme in Neuroscience.
Overview
The course examines how the nervous system represents its three-dimensional environment, how vision and kinaesthesis contribute to the control of goal-directed action, how behaviour becomes refined in normal and abnormal development, and how impairments in brain-damaged patients can help us to understand normal cognitive functioning. It also considers how models of normal cognition can explain cognitive deficits following brain damage.
Structure
1 lecture per week and 1 workshop every four weeks.
Assessment
1st Attempt: 1 ninety-minute written examination (75%), in-course assessment (25%).
- PS 3513 - METHODOLOGY B
-
- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- Dr J Crawford
Pre-requisites
Notes
This course can only be taken by students pursuing an Honours Degree Programme in Psychology.
Overview
This course is a sequel to PS 3009 aiming to equip students with the skills and knowledge needed to carry out and evaluate psychological research. It consists of lectures on data analysis (especially correlation, regression, and various multivariate forms of analysis) and examples of specific research methodologies, as well as statistical and data exploration exercises using the statistical package SPSS for Windows. Students also work together in small groups under staff supervision on a practical project for which a full report (counting as the in-course assessment component of the course) is required.
Structure
12 week course - 1 lecture, 1 SPSS practical and 4 laboratory sessions per week.
Assessment
1st Attempt: Examination (70%) and in-course assessment (30%).
- PS 3516 - HUMAN MEMORY
-
- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- Dr D Pearson
Pre-requisites
(except Neuroscience students) PS 3011, PS 3012 and
PS 3013. Neuroscience students: PS 3012 and PS 3013.Co-requisites
(except Neuroscience students): PS 3514 and PS 3515.
Notes
This course can only be taken by students pursuing either an Honours or Designated Degree Programme in Psychology or an Honours or Designated Degree Programme in Neuroscience.
Overview
The cognitive study of human learning and memory; the modal and working memory models and the characteristics of their components; the application of memory models to everyday cognition.
Structure
12 week course - 1 lecture per week and one workshop every four weeks.
Assessment
1st Attempt: 1 ninety minute examination (75%) and in-course assessment (25%).
- PS 3517 - SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY
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- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- Dr A B Milne
Pre-requisites
Co-requisites
PS 3518 and PS 3516.
Notes
This course can only be taken by students pursuing an Honours or Designated Degree Programme in Psychology.
Overview
Attribution Theory, Social Perception and Memory, Sterotyping and Prejudice, Mental Control and Self-Regulation; Attitude Formation and Attitude Change, Social Indentity Theory, Self-Categorisation Theory, Inter-group Relations, Aggression.
Structure
12 week course - 1 lecture per week and one workshop every four weeks.
Assessment
1st Attempt: 1 ninety-minute written examination (75%) and in-course assessment (25%).
- PS 3518 - DEVELOPMENT PSYCHOLOGY
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- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- Dr J Hosie
Pre-requisites
Co-requisites
PS 3514 and PS 3516.
Notes
This course can only be taken by students pursuing an Honours or Designated Degree Programme in Psychology.
Overview
Theories and approaches to language acquisition; Human face processing; Theory of Mind and atypical development.
Structure
1 lecture per week and one workshop every four weeks.
Assessment
1st Attempt: 1 ninety minute written examination (75%) and in-course assessment (25%).
Level 4
- PS 4019 - PSYCHOLOGY THESIS
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- Credit Points
- 30
- Course Coordinator
- Dr D Carey
Pre-requisites
120 credit points from level 3 Psychology courses.
Overview
A thesis based on an empirical investigation conducted under the guidance of a supervisor.
Structure
20 week course - 1 one-hour tutorial per week. Laboratory work as required. Continues in second half-session.
Assessment
1st Attempt: Assessment of the thesis counts for one ninth of the final Honours assessment.
Resit (for Honours students only): Candidates achieving a CAS mark of 6-8 may be awarded compensatory level 1 credit. Candidates achieving a CAS mark of less than 6 will be required to submit themselves for re-assessment and should contact the Course Co-ordinator for further details.
- PS 4029 - PSYCHOLOGY A FOR COMBINED DEGREE
-
- Credit Points
- 30
- Course Coordinator
- Dr J Hosie and Dr D Carey
Pre-requisites
120 credit points from Level 3 Psychology courses.
Co-requisites
PS 4019
Notes
This course is only open to students taking Combined Honours in Psychology. Such students will take Psychology A for Combined degree plus Psychology B for Combined degree plus PS 4019 (thesis). These students cannot take other listed fourth year psychology courses.
Overview
Two options chosen from a list made available by the School of Psychology and which may change from year to year. Tutorials and essays will consider general issues and current developments in psychology.
Structure
12 week course - 2 one-hour lectures, 1 one-hour research seminar, 1 one-hour tutorial every three weeks.
Assessment
1st Attempt: 2 ninety minute written examinations (66%) and in-course assessment (33%).
Resit (for Honours students only): Candidates achieving a CAS mark of 6-8 may be awarded compensatory level 1 credit. Candidates achieving a CAS mark of less than 6 will be required to submit themselves for re-assessment and should contact the Course Co-ordinator for further details.
- PS 4030 - SENIOR HONOURS PSYCHOLOGY A
-
- Credit Points
- 45
- Course Coordinator
- Dr J Hosie and Dr D Carey
Pre-requisites
120 credit points from Level 3 Psychology courses.
Co-requisites
PS 4019
Notes
This course is only open to single honours psychology students. Students registered for single honours psychology will take Senior Honours Psychology A plus Senior Honours Psychology B plus PS 4019 (thesis). These students cannot take other listed fourth year psychology courses.
Overview
Three options chosen from a list made available by the School of Psychology and which may change from year to year. Tutorials and essays will consider general issues and current developments in psychology.
Structure
12 week course - 3 one-hour lectures, 1 one-hour research seminar, 1 one-hour tutorial every fortnight.
Assessment
1st Attempt: 3 ninety minute written examinations (75%) and in-course assessment (25%).
Resit (for Honours students only): Candidates achieving a CAS mark of 6-8 may be awarded compensatory level 1 credit. Candidates achieving a CAS mark of less than 6 will be required to submit themselves for re-assessment and should contact the Course Co-ordinator for further details.
- PS 4031 - ADVANCES IN NEUROPSYCHOLOGY
-
- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- Dr M Milders
Pre-requisites
Level 4 Psychology Joint Honours degree student.
Overview
Cognitive neuroscience:
The importance of movement, the modular approach, the mysteries of the mind, distance perception, cue combination, attention, gauging time-to-contact and kinaesthesis.
Cognitive neuropsychology:
The aim of cognitive neuropsychology is to improve understanding of the organisation of the human cognitive system by studying the behaviour of brain damaged patients. After briefly reviewing the history, objectives and main assumptions of cognitive neuropsychology, theories and research findings from several cognitive areas will be examined, including object and face recognition, language production and comprehension. This should illustrate how cognitive neuropsychology works and how it can enhance insight into the cognitive system.
Assessment
1st attempt: 1 90-minute written examination 75%; in-course assessment 25%.
Resit (for Honours students only): Candidates achieving a CAS mark of 6-8 may be awarded compensatory level 1 credit. Candidates achieving a CAS mark of less than 6 will be required to submit themselves for re-assessment and should contact the Course Co-ordinator for further details.
- PS 4032 - PERCEPTUAL PROCESSES
-
- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- Dr A Sahraie
Pre-requisites
Level 4 Psychology Joint Honours degree student.
Overview
Introduction to some of the problems with the interpretation of retinal images.
Perception of wavelength and colour vision anomalies and deficits.
Stereopsis and theories of depth perception. Monocular and binocular cues to depth information.
Use of sinusoidal gratings in visual sensitivity experiments and the determination of the contrast sensitivity function (CSF).
Visual processing at the cortex. In particular cortical processing of orientation, colour and motion. Abnormalities of cortical processing. Similarities and differences in cortical architechture of human and monkey brain.
Pre-attentive and attentive processing of orientation, motion and colour. Investigation of visual attention using psychophysical and physiological techniques.
Assessment
1st Attempt: 1 90-minute written examination 75%; in-course assessment 25%.
Resit (for Honours students only): Candidates achieving a CAS mark of 6-8 may be awarded compensatory level 1 credit. Candidates achieving a CAS mark of less than 6 will be required to submit themselves for re-assessment and should contact the Course Co-ordinator for further details.
- PS 4507 - RESEARCH PROJECT
-
- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- Dr D Carey
Pre-requisites
60 credit points from level 3 courses. This course is for Joint Honours Psychology students only.
Overview
The course requires the student to carry out, under supervision, an empirical piece of research on a topic chosen by the student in consultation with the supervisor.
Structure
2 one-hour tutorials per week.
Assessment
1st Attempt: In-course assessment (100%).
Resit (for Honours students only): Candidates achieving a CAS mark of 6-8 may be awarded compensatory level 1 credit. Candidates achieving a CAS mark of less than 6 will be required to submit themselves for re-assessment and should contact the Course Co-ordinator for further details.
- PS 4529 - PSYCHOLOGY B FOR COMBINED DEGREE
-
- Credit Points
- 30
- Course Coordinator
- Dr J Hosie and Dr D Carey
Pre-requisites
Co-requisites
PS 4013
Notes
This course is only open to students taking Combined Honours in Psychology. Such students will take Psychology A for combined degrees plus Psychology B for combined degrees plus PS 4019 (thesis). These students cannot take other listed fourth year psychology courses.
Overview
Two options chosen from a list made available by the School of Psychology and which may change from year to year. Tutorials and essays will consider general issues and current developments in psychology.
Structure
12 week course - 2 one-hour lectures, 1 one-hour research seminar, 1 one-hour tutorial every three weeks.
Assessment
1st Attempt: 2 ninety minute written examinations (66%) and in-course assessment (33%).
Resit (for Honours students only): Candidates achieving a CAS mark of 6-8 may be awarded compensatory level 1 credit. Candidates achieving a CAS mark of less than 6 will be required to submit themselves for re-assessment and should contact the Course Co-ordinator for further details.
- PS 4530 - SENIOR HONOURS PSYCHOLOGY B
-
- Credit Points
- 45
- Course Coordinator
- Dr J Hosie and Dr D Carey
Pre-requisites
Co-requisites
PS 4013
Notes
This course is only open to single honours psychology students. Students registered for single honours psychology will take Senior Honours Psychology A plus Senior Honours Psychology B plus PS 4019 (thesis). These students cannot take other listed fourth year psychology courses.
Overview
Three options chosen from a list made available by the School of Psychology and which may change from year to year. Tutorials and essays will consider general issues and current developments in psychology.
Structure
12 week course - 3 one-hour lectures, 1 one-hour research seminar, 1 one-hour tutorial every fortnight.
Assessment
1st Attempt: 3 ninety minute written examinations (75%) and in-course assessment (25%).
Resit (for Honours students only): Candidates achieving a CAS mark of 6-8 may be awarded compensatory level 1 credit. Candidates achieving a CAS mark of less than 6 will be required to submit themselves for re-assessment and should contact the Course Co-ordinator for further details.
- PS 4531 - MEMORY PROCESSES
-
- Credit Points
- 15
- Course Coordinator
- Dr D Pearson
Pre-requisites
Level 4 Psychology Joint Honours degree student.
Overview
Multi-store models of memory, and the characteristics of short and long term memory will be examined including a description of the phonological loop and the visuo-spatial sketchpad components of working memory, and a discussion of how general attentional or central executive resources may be involved in the short-term retention and processing of information. The dual-coding theory of human learning and the debate over whether mental imagery relies on analogue of propositional representations. How information is organised within long-term memory, and whether it is valid to distinguish between episodic and semantic stores of knowledge. The applicability of cognitive models of learning and memory to aspects to everyday cognition will be assessed. Revision of the relevant points about episodic memory and a description of the components of episodic memory that may function in real-time as memories are retrieved. Neuroimaging evidence for whether the brain actually behaves in the way that the models predict. The role of inhibitory processes in memory responsible for controlling access to consciousness. Unconscious and conscious inhibitory processes. Forgetting as a side effect of inhibiting a memory, and how inhibition may play a role in the poor memories often found in eyewitnesses to crimes.
Assessment
1st attempt: 1 90-minute written examination 75%; in-course assessment 25%.
Resit (for Honours students only): Candidates achieving a CAS mark of 6-8 may be awarded compensatory level 1 credit. Candidates achieving a CAS mark of less than 6 will be required to submit themselves for re-assessment and should contact the Course Co-ordinator for further details.