General Description of the Certificate Program The Center for Cognitive Science does not grant degrees. However, students earning degrees in participating departments can earn a Certificate in Cognitive Science by successfully completing the Certificate requirements in addition to those necessary for their PhD. Cognitive Science is an interdisciplinary area of scholarship concerned with understanding the nature and development of such intelligent capacities as perception, language, reasoning, planning, problem-solving, and related skills, whether these capacities are instantiated in biological or artificial systems. Members of the Rutgers Center for Cognitive Science (RuCCS) may have joint appointments with such participating academic departments as Psychology, Linguistics, Philosophy, Computer Science, and others as the program develops. RuCCS also has working relationships with a number of other graduate programs (such as Biomedical Engineering, the Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, the School of Information, Communication, and Library Studies) and with other research centers on campus, such as the Computer Aids for Industrial Productivity Center, the Laboratory of Vision Research, the Laboratory for Computer Science Research, or the Center for Math, Science and Computer Education. The goal of the Cognitive Science Certificate program is to provide a structured way for students enrolled in various graduate programs to study and carry out research in Cognitive Science with guidance from relevant faculty advisors, and to bring interested students from different departments together in a graduate student community integrated into the general university research community. This list of courses is not meant to be exhaustive. Proposals for adding additional courses in various departments, such as (but not limited to) the School of Information, Communication and Library Studies, the Graduate School of Education, the Department of Neuroscience and Cell Biology, the department of Mathematics, and the departments of Electrical and Mechanical Engineering, will also be considered by the certificate committee for credit towards the Certificate in Cognitive Science. Certificate Program Requirements Admission to the Certificate Program and the selection of courses and required research project is subject to the approval of the Cognitive Science Certificate Committee (CSCC). Admission is based on academic performance and interests, and requires the approval of the graduate program of the department in which the student is enrolled. The CSCC is drawn from the RuCCS faculty, augmented where appropriate in order to provide representation from participating departments. To receive the Certificate in Cognitive Science the student must successfully complete the requirements for a PhD in the department in which the student is registered, and must also meet the following additional requirements (note that these requirements MAY in some cases be met without taking additional courses beyond those allowed as electives in the student's program):
Cognitive Science Program Course Offerings
Qualifying Courses
Additional Qualifying Courses The list of courses above is not meant to be exhaustive. Proposals for adding additional courses in various departments, such as (but not limited to) the School of Information, Communication and Library Studies, the Graduate School of Education, the Department of Neuroscience and Cell Biology, the department of Mathematics, and the departments of Electrical and Mechanical Engineering, will also be considered by the certificate committee for credit towards the Certificate in Cognitive Science. Admission to the Certificate Program If you have an interest in Cognitive Science you should at some stage -- preferably on (or even before) your arrival at a Rutgers as a graduate student -- let the director of the Certificate Program know of your interest by submitting to him your registration information. You will then be classified as a Cognitive Science Student and placed on our mailing list for announcements of Cognitive Science events (such as lectures and special courses). You will also be expected to participate actively in a Graduate Student Speaker series and to give talks on your ideas or your work-in-progress. You would also be expected to attend our colloquia, visiting speakers' talks and non-credit mini-courses of interest to you. Failure to take an active part in the activities of the Center will result in your being deleted from our list of active Cognitive Science Students. Students in good standing in their departments may also petition the director of the Certificate Program for admission as official candidates for the Certificate in Cognitive Science. This will normally occur after students have completed the required Cognitive Science ProSeminar (16:185:500). Such official Certificate Candidates will be assigned a faculty advisor who will advise them with regard to courses and research requirements for the Certificate. If you are one of these students you would be eligible to compete for the limited supply of Cognitive Science Graduate Fellowships. The expectation is that if you maintain a satisfactory standing as a Certificate Candidate, as determined by the the Cognitive Science Certificate Committee, and meet all the formal requirements, you would be granted a Certificate in Cognitive Science at the time that you receive your graduate degree. This Certificate, along with your transcript and the endorsement of the program, will identify you as having attained special training in the interdisciplinary field of Cognitive Science. Under special circumstances students may be admitted as Candidates for the Certificate program, and be eligible for a Cognitive science Fellowship, at the time they are first admitted to a graduate program at Rutgers. Such students will have an exceptional record and a demonstrated commitment to the interdisciplinary study of Cognitive Science. Also under special circumstances students may petition the Certificate Committee for equivalent-credit for courses taken elsewhere or for independent research work. Guidelines for the Independent Research Project One of the requirements for obtaining a Certificate in Cognitive Science is to complete an independent research project that will provide breadth of experience outside of the methodologies typically used in the student's home discipline. The expectation is that in the second year of their candidacy for the Certificate (i.e. the academic year following their Proseminar credit) students will register in course 16:185:699 -- Independent Studies in Cognitive Science. This entails finding a supervisor from among the faculty associated with the Center but outside the department in which the student is registered. Together they would work out a proposal for a project -- which may involve library research, theoretical work, programming or running experiments. Once a brief written proposal is approved by the supervisor and the Director of the program, the student would carry out the research project according to a mutually agreed schedule. Although it is not easy to specify the scope of the project and report, it will be a larger piece of work than a course paper but less that a MA or MSc thesis. A journal article would be an appropriate model to aim for. Normally the project is expected to be started in the second year and to take less than a calendar year to complete. In order to allow a project of some depth, it is recommended that the research be on a topic with which the student is already familiar -- for example, an area of research related to the student's dissertation work -- but approached from the perspective of a allied discipline. |
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