All Courses

  • LING 306 001 Sp19

    This course is about the relation of language to human cognition. How does human language in general, and any specific language in particular, interact with cognition and human cognitive processing? How does language relate to thought? Do we think in language? If so, what is such a "language of thought" like, given that we cannot hear it or observe it directly? Is the mind like a computer and language like a computer program? or are there other ways of thinking about language that are better given what we know about the mind? How does language relate to other key aspects of cognition such as perception, attention, and memory? Are there ways in which language has similarities to these aspects of cognition? What ways is it different? How can we use the study of language to find out about the mind? Conversely, how can we use the study of the mind and/or brain, and all the knowledge we have about it, to shed light on the nature, structure, or origin of human language? A crucial aspect of language is meaning - how does linguistic meaning relate to the way the mind works, and the way the brain works? Many approaches to language have focused almost entirely on linguistic form - the phonological, morphological and syntactic forms that can be deduced from the physical aspects of language such as sound or visual perception (in the case of signed languages). In recent years the focus has shifted back to linguistic meaning, after a generation of form-based theories. This class explores these and other questions and issues, starting from the assumption that any hope of understanding the relation of language and mind has to place meaning in the center of investigation.

  • LING 320 001 Sp19

    As far as we can tell, only one species has a communicative system of the complexity of human language, and that is humans. By comparing full-blown human language with other systems, we can learn something about how human language arose in prehistory. Recent advances in primate cognition and social behavior, infant cognition and social behavior, archeology, genetics, and other fields allow us to adduce various sorts of evidence, of various degrees of directness, to make hypotheses about the origin and development of human language. In doing so, we can also learn more about human language itself and the nature of the human species.

  • ESCI 571 001 Sp19

    This course covers the foundations, methodology and tools for data science with a focus on Oil & Gas Industry.

  • ELEC 522 001 F19

    Design and analysis of algorithm-specific VLSI processor architectures. Topics include the implementation of pipelined and systolic processor arrays. Techniques for mapping numerical algorithms onto custom processor arrays. Course includes design project using high-level VLSI synthesis tools.

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