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  • Graduate study in Cognitive and Neural Systems at BostonUniversity

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    ***********************************************
    * *
    * DEPARTMENT OF *
    * COGNITIVE AND NEURAL SYSTEMS (CNS) *
    * AT BOSTON UNIVERSITY *
    * *
    ***********************************************

    Stephen Grossberg, Chairman
    Gail A. Carpenter, Director of Graduate Studies


    The Boston University Department of Cognitive and Neural Systems offers
    comprehensive advanced training in the neural and computational principles,
    mechanisms, and architectures that underly human and animal behavior,
    and the application of neural network architectures to the solution of
    technological problems.

    Applications for Fall, 1994 admission and financial aid are now being
    accepted for both the MA and PhD degree programs.

    To obtain a brochure describing the CNS Program and a set of application
    materials, write, telephone, or fax:

    Department of Cognitive & Neural Systems
    Boston University
    111 Cummington Street, Room 240
    Boston, MA 02215
    617/353-9481 (phone)
    617/353-7755 (fax)

    or send via email your full name and mailing address to:

    rll@cns.bu.edu

    Applications for admission and financial aid should be received by the
    Graduate School Admissions Office no later than January 15. Late
    applications will be considered until May 1; after that date applications
    will be considered only as special cases.

    Applicants are required to submit undergraduate (and, if applicable,
    graduate) transcripts, three letters of recommendation, and Graduate
    Record Examination (GRE) scores. The Advanced Test should be in the
    candidate's area of departmental specialization. GRE scores may be
    waived for MA candidates and, in exceptional cases, for PhD candidates,
    but absence of these scores may decrease an applicant's chances for
    admission and financial aid.

    Non-degree students may also enroll in CNS courses on a part-time basis.

    Description of the CNS Department:

    The Department of Cognitive and Neural Systems (CNS) provides advanced
    training and research experience for graduate students interested in the
    neural and computational principles, mechanisms, and architectures that
    underlie human and animal behavior, and the application of neural network
    architectures to the solution of technological problems. Students are
    trained in a broad range of areas concerning cognitive and neural systems,
    including vision and image processing; speech and language understanding;
    adaptive pattern recognition; cognitive information processing; self-
    organization; associative learning and long-term memory; computational
    neuroscience; nerve cell biophysics; cooperative and competitive network
    dynamics and short-term memory; reinforcement, motivation, and attention;
    adaptive sensory-motor control and robotics; active vision; and biological
    rhythms; as well as the mathematical and computational methods needed to
    support advanced modeling research and applications. The CNS Department
    awards MA, PhD, and BA/MA degrees.

    The CNS Department embodies a number of unique features. It has developed
    a curriculum that consists of twelve interdisciplinary graduate courses
    each of which integrates the psychological, neurobiological, mathematical,
    and computational information needed to theoretically investigate
    fundamental issues concerning mind and brain processes and the applications
    of neural networks to technology. Nine additional advanced courses,
    including research seminars, are also offered. Each course is typically
    taught once a week in the evening to make the program available to
    qualified students, including working professionals, throughout the Boston
    area. Students develop a coherent area of expertise by designing a program
    that includes courses in areas such as Biology, Computer Science, Engineering,
    Mathematics, and Psychology, in addition to courses in the CNS curriculum.

    The CNS Department prepares students for thesis research with scientists
    in one of several Boston University research centers or groups, and with
    Boston-area scientists collaborating with these centers. The unit most
    closely linked to the department is the Center for Adaptive Systems (CAS).
    Students interested in neural network hardware work with researchers in
    CNS, the College of Engineering, and at MIT Lincoln Laboratory. Other
    research resources include distinguished research groups in neurophysiology,
    neuroanatomy, and neuropharmacology at the Medical School and the Charles
    River campus; in sensory robotics, biomedical engineering, computer and
    systems engineering, and neuromuscular research within the Engineering
    School; in dynamical systems within the Mathematics Department; in
    theoretical computer science within the Computer Science Department; and
    in biophysics and computational physics within the Physics Department.

    In addition to its basic research and training program, the Department
    conducts a seminar series, as well as conferences and symposia, which bring
    together distinguished scientists from both experimental and theoretical
    disciplines.

    1993-94 CAS MEMBERS and CNS FACULTY:

    Jacob Beck
    Daniel H. Bullock
    Gail A. Carpenter
    Chan-Sup Chung
    Michael A. Cohen
    H. Steven Colburn
    Paolo Gaudiano
    Stephen Grossberg
    Frank H. Guenther
    Thomas G. Kincaid
    Nancy Kopell
    Ennio Mingolla
    Heiko Neumann
    Alan Peters
    Adam Reeves
    Eric L. Schwartz
    Allen Waxman
    Jeremy Wolfe
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