| Instructor | Office | Telephone | |
| J. Timothy Cannon, Ph.D. | AMH 204 | 9414266 (Office)
586-2022 (Home) |
CANNON |
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| OFFICE HOURS: | Mon 12:00 - 12:50 Wed 9:00 - 9:50 Thurs 2:30 - 3:20 |
OBJECTIVES: This course will provide a broad survey of the research orientations and findings in the major areas of neuroscience. We will begin with an examination of the fundamental aspects of neuroscience and build to the consideration of highly integrated behaviors.
CLASS ATTENDANCE: You are responsible for all announcements made in class, you may be tested on any lecture material, and you (or someone dear to your heart) paid a bunch of money so you could take this class. I feel no need to impose additional contingencies for missed lectures. My procedures for dealing with missed exams are described below.
GRADING:
Examination Grades:
The results of each test will be "curved" (see below) on a 4.67 point
scale. Typically, the top grade on each defines "4.67." Chance
performance (that which could be earned merely by stabbing a pencil at
the answer sheet) defines "0.0". For each test, additional raw scores
will be announced that determine "1.0", "2.0", "2.67", "3.67", and
"4.67". You can calculate your precise curved
score by interpolation. For example, if 40= 2.67, 45 = 3.67, and you
earned
a score of 44 on Exam I, then your curved test score would be 3.47
(that
is 2.67 + 4/5 = 3.47). If you are unsure about what your grade
is,
or question if you calculated it correctly, come visit.
Note: My curve is not based on number of people, rather, on percentage of earned points. Therefore, there is no limit to the proportion of students who can earn A's (or any other grade).At the end of the course, your final grade will be converted from averaged number to letter grade based upon the numeric values of letters in calculating the GPA. For example, a B+ = 3.33 and an A- = 3.67; therefore, the A- range would be from 3.67 to 3.99. A grade of A would be earned for a course average of 4.0 and above. The 3.47 you received in the earlier example would be a B+, leaving you .2 below the A- range and .14 above the B+ range.
This grading procedure may at first glance seem a bit complex, but it is to your benefit. You know precisely what grade you have at any given point in the course--you don't have "about a B+," rather, you have a 3.47. Once you've gotten an exam back, you've got a grade that you can put in the bank, not an approximate value that may shift based on a final "mystery" grade distribution that won't come into existence until the end of the semester. Knowledge is power.
Numbers to Letters:
For each exam you will receive a grade that ranges from "0.0" to
"4.67",
such as the 3.47 mentioned above. You can convert these numeric grades
to
letter grades using the following table. On the table below, a
3.47
equates to a grade within the B+ range:
| A | 4.00 to 4.67 |
| A- | 3.67 to 3.99 |
| B+ | 3.33 to 3.66 |
| B | 3.00 to 3.32 |
| B- | 2.67 to 2.99 |
| C+ | 2.33 to 2.66 |
| C | 2.00 to 2.32 |
| C- | 1.67 to 1.99 |
| D+ | 1.33 to 1.66 |
| D | 1.00 to 1.32 |
| F | 0.00 to .99 |
Tests will consist of: text figures, your repreductions of drawings, multiple choice, fill-in, and short answer essay questions drawn from both lecture and ALL assigned readings. Students should not overlook the latter source of information. NOTE WELL, there will be a comprehensive component to exams 2 and 3. As the semester progresses, I will identify material that is so fundamental to the course that it may appear on every subsequent exam. By the end of the course, this fundamental information should be second nature to you. The net effect of this Rolling Thunder cumulative testing procedure is that it will make the overall course much easier because you will remain fluent in the basic concepts necessary to understand all course content. Trust me, you'll like it!
The Final:
The final examination will be subdivided into 4
major sections. Three of the sections will correspond to materials
covered in
each of the 3 semester exams, the fourth section will deal with
material
covered since the third exam. Your curved grade for the final will be
defined
by the total number of correct answers on the test overall. In
addition,
curved scores will be calculated for each of the three subsections of
the
final that dealt with semester exam material.
The Challenge Option:
You may opt to challenge (i.e., replace) one and only one semester exam grade with the appropriate curved score from the final. The midterm and final sub-part grades will be compared and the HIGHER used in calculating your course grade. The challenge option cannot lower your score. If you have missed a semester exam, you must use your challenge to replace this grade.
ASSIGNED READINGS: Unless specifically assigned, you will not
be
tested on information that is contained ONLY in a figure or table.
NOTE: YOU MUST CHOOSE AND COMPLETE ONLY ONE OF THE FOLLOWING TWO ASSIGNMENTS.
Grading: These assignments will be graded on a pass/no pass basis (not passing doesn't happen, but it would result in a lowering of your overall course grade by 1.0). For those of you who don't know how to create a web page, help will be provided by the TA or myself.
Kids Judge: On Saturday, November 22, the University will sponsor its third Kids Judge Neuroscience event. Grade school children will come to campus for a festive day of (typically) hands on presentations relating to neuroscience. Kids Judge is funded by a federal grant and small budgets will be available to support your presentation needs. The visiting students will grade your presentations (their grades, don't affect your grade, by the way) and the winning presentation will receive and award at the end of the day. Individuals, or teams of up to 5 students, may prepare these presentations and related web support materials in lieu of the following individual assignment. You must let me know if you will be doing Kids Judge by October 30th.
Web-Based: During the course of the semester you will choose, or be assigned, a topic upon which to prepare a web page that presents an annotated bibliography (8-15 citations, mostly journal articles but it may include a sprinkling of annotated links from the World Wide Web). After each annotation, write a brief summary of your "reaction" to this article. These bibliographies should evolve on the web during the semester and must be complete by 3:00 pm on Friday, November 14 . You should retain complete copies of all journal articles and bring them to our meeting. After submitting your bibliography, you will choose a 20 minute period from those I will have posted outside of my office in order to schedule a non-threatening collegial discussion of the research area in which you have developed some expertise.
To maximize your enjoyment and educational experience, choose a topic that interests you. Typically (but it's not a rule), your first citation will be chosen from those referenced in your text. Be certain to have your topic and key reference approved prior to beginning any substantial library work.
You will not be responsible for obtaining any articles through inter-library loan. You must make use of the library's databases to obtain some of your citations. Students who have had Research Methods already know how to use these data bases. Tutorials will be set up for all other students.
BLACKBOARD-BASED-THAT SHOULD HAVE BEEN ON THE EXAM QUESTIONS: No exam is perfect and I hate to think that you've labored to master some difficult concept only to find that the concept doesn't/didn't show up on an exam.
Within 48 hours after each exam, you will put in the appropriate discussion board thread a fully formed question (multiple choice questions should include options) that you wish had been asked. Include the correct answer and relevant text page(s), if appropriate. I'll browse through the above questions and use as many as possible on relevant exams. Of course, your peers can also browse through them, knowing that some of these questions will be on the exams.
Failure to meet these
deadlines will result
in a reduction in relevant exam grade by .2 for each class day.
| Week Of | Topic |
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Introduction | Ch. 1 |
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Structure and
Functions of Cells of the Nervous System |
Ch. 2 |
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Structure of the
Nervous System |
Ch. 3 |
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Psychopharmacology | Ch. 4 |
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Methods and
Strategies of Research |
ch.
5 Exam 1-- Thursday (Chapters 1-5) |
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Vision | Ch. 6 |
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Auditions, the Body
Systems, and the Chemical Senses
Control of Movement |
Ch. 7, 8 Fall Break Begins |
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Sleep and Biological
Rythms |
ch. 9
Classes Resume on Wednesday |
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Reproduction Behavior
Emotion |
Ch. 10, 11 |
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Ingestive Behavior |
Exam 2--Tuesday(Chapters 6-11 ) October 30th-Notify
instructor if you wish to participate in Kids Judge Neuoscience, |
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Learning and Memory:
Basic Mechanisms |
Ch. 13 |
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Relational Learing
and Amnesia
Human Communication |
Ch. 14, 15 Web-based bibliographies due by 3:00 Friday |
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Schizophrenia and
the Affective Disorders Anxiety Disorders, Autistic Disorders, and Stress Disorders |
Ch. 16, 17 |
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Exam 3 (Chapters 12-17) Thanksgiving on Thursday |
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Drug Abuse |
Dead Week Begins
December 2: Notify instructor if you wish to use the Challenge Option Ch. 18 Thursday - Last Day of Class |
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Final Exam Week
Final Exam TBA |