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General Information
Office: 5.218 Seay Building (SEA)
Director of The Similarity and Cognition Lab
FAX: (512)471-6175 |
In the Fall of 2009, I am teaching the undergraduate Honors Seminar. The syllabus is available here.
In the past, I have taught the lower-division course in cognition, PSY 305, a graduate seminar on Reasoning
and Decision Making. and a graduate seminar on Knowledge
Representation. I have also taught an undergraduate seminar on Reasoning and Decision Making, and PSY 418,
Statistics and Research Methods. An old syllabus for PSY 418 is available here.
I have also coordinated PSY 387R, Fundamentals
of Cognition.
After getting a B.S. in Cognitive
Science from Brown University in 1988,
I went on to graduate school in the Psychology
Department at the University of Illinois,
where I got my PhD in 1992. Then, I spent five years as an Assistant Professor
in the Psychology Department
at Columbia University. My research has
focused on three main areas. First, I am interested in the way people see
things to be similar, and how they process similarity and analogy comparisons.
While the study of similarity is interesting for its own sake, it is also
interesting because of what it can tell us about other psychological processes.
In order to look at the way that our ability to make comparisons affects our
cognitive processing, I also do research on category learning and decision
making. Here is a list of selected publications.
For those of you interested in indirect measures of evaluation, I
collaborated with Miguel Brendl and Claude Messner to develop the Evaluative
Movement Assessment (EMA) technique. The program for running this technique can
be found here.
I am currently the executive editor of the journal Cognitive Science. The journal is published by the Cognitive Science Society.
For more information about the journal, check out this link. For
electronic access to the journal, go here.
To submit a paper to the journal, go here.
It pains me to admit that I am a member of the Psychology
Department Limerick Committee.
Many people wonder what I do when I'm not at work. Here,
see for yourself.
Go to the University of Texas home page.
Go to the University of Texas
Psychology Department home page.