Term: | Fall 2024 |
Course Number: | PSYC 3240 |
Class times: | Lecture MWF 9-9:50 PM, Gilmer Hall 390 |
Final exam: | due Saturday, 12/14, by 5 PM |
Course site: | https://meliza.org/courses/anim_behav/fall_2024/ |
Canvas site: | https://canvas.its.virginia.edu/courses/119989 |
Last revised: | 8/26/24 |
Office | Office Hours | ||
Daniel Meliza | cdm8j | Gilmer 481 | W 2-3, Th 9:30-10:30 in Gilmer 481, or by appointment |
Yao Lu (TA) | yl6tm | Gilmer 253 | W 10-12, F 10-11 |
Animals come in a bewildering array of shapes and sizes, and their behaviors are even more diverse. Are there common patterns or relationships that can help us make sense of how animals interact with their environments and with each other? What can we know about the conscious awareness of other species when we can’t communicate with them? And how much of human behavior reflects our common ancestry with other animals?
Most people find animals intrinsically interesting to watch and enjoy speculating on why animals engage in various behaviors. In this course, you will learn how to develop your intuitive narratives into a more rigorous understanding based on the scientific practice of observation, hypothesis, and experiment. In the process, you will acquire a deeper awareness of what animals are doing in your environment, a greater appreciation for the complexity of animal minds, and a better understanding of the behaviors of our own species.
In contrast to many other branches of the natural sciences, understanding animal behavior requires you to master relatively few facts and theories, but you must learn to use these concepts to analyze a variety of behaviors across the animal kingdom. Understanding complex systems in terms of simple rules is a big part of what scientists do, and this course will stretch your ability to think about problems scientifically. By completing this course, you will be able to:
We will use a range of techniques to assess your progress toward these goals. Feedback will be derived from variety of sources, including quizzes, homework assignments, and midterms. Your progress at the end of the class will be assessed through a comprehensive final exam.
Each of the reading assignments has an associated quiz. These are open-book and may be taken as many times as you like. The two lowest quiz scores (after any penalities) are dropped from final grade calculation.
You will also be assigned exercises to drill key concepts and build critical scientific thinking. Assignments are due at the beginning of class. The lowest homework score (after penalities) is dropped from final grade calculation.
To help you solidify and retain your understanding of course content and themes I will give two in-class midterms during the term. These will test your knowledge of the readings, terms and concepts central to the course, and your ability to reason about experiments, models, and hypotheses. The exams will emphasize short written answers.
As a final assessment of your understanding of the concepts covered in lectures, you will complete an open-book comprehensive final exam.
The required textbook for this course is Animal Cognition: Evolution, Behavior, & Cognition, Wynne and Udell (2013). Palgrave MacMillan, 3rd Edition (ISBN-13: 978-1137611260). We are participating in a new inclusive access program that provides this text through the course Canvas site at a reduced price. Access during the first two weeks is free. After September 6, your student account will be charged $42.95. Important: if you purchase the text elsewhere, you must actively opt out by the deadline to not be charged. Due to the special pricing, no refunds can be processed. If you have any questions regarding the program, please contact UVAInclusiveAccess@virginia.edu.
There will be several other required readings posted to Canvas Files. These will be linked from the syllabus or in an email through the Canvas system. A clicker is not required.
Quizzes
Gradescope
. See the
Gradescope Help Center and Student Guide if you
haven’t used this system before.All lecture topics, readings, assignment due dates, and test dates are shown in the table below. Due dates in Canvas take precedence, but please ask on Discussions if there is an unexpected discrepancy.
Date | Topic | Readings | Assignments Due |
---|---|---|---|
Theme 1 | What are animals doing? | ||
W 8/28 | Intro, what is behavior (ethology)? | ||
F 8/30 | How do animals experience the world? | AC1, this syllabus | |
M 9/2 | AC2 | ||
W 9/4 | |||
F 9/6 | Learning about relationships between stimuli | AC5 | |
M 9/9 | |||
W 9/11 | |||
F 9/13 | Learning how to respond to stimuli | Classical Conditioning | |
M 9/16 | |||
W 9/18 | |||
F 9/20 | Quantitative models of learning | Rescorla-Wagner handout | |
M 9/23 | |||
W 9/25 | Rescorla-Wagner | ||
Theme 2 | What do animals know about the world? | ||
F 9/27 | What is a stimulus anyway? | AC3 | |
M 9/30 | Midterm 1 (covers Theme 1) | ||
W 10/2 | |||
F 10/4 | |||
M 10/7 | Can animals count? | AC4 | |
W 10/9 | Experimental Design | ||
F 10/11 | |||
M 10/14 | No class (fall break) | ||
W 10/16 | How do animals know where they are? | AC7 | Behavior in the News |
F 10/18 | |||
M 10/21 | |||
W 10/23 | What do animals remember? | AC10 | Literature Search |
F 10/25 | |||
M 10/28 | |||
Theme 3 | What’s so special about humans? | ||
W 10/30 | Communicating? | AC11 | |
F 11/1 | |||
M 11/4 | Midterm 2 (covers Theme 2) | ||
W 11/6 | |||
F 11/8 | Causal reasoning? | AC6 | |
M 11/11 | |||
W 11/13 | Questions and Hypotheses | ||
F 11/15 | Intentionality and planning? | AC9 | |
M 11/18 | |||
W 11/20 | Social cognition and theory of mind? | ||
F 11/22 | |||
M 11/25 | Self-Awareness? | AC8, AC12 | |
W 11/27 | No class or office hours (Thanksgiving) | ||
F 11/29 | No class (Thanksgiving) | ||
M 12/2 | Language? | ||
W 12/4 | Time Travel | ||
F 12/6 | Putting it all together | AC13 | |
12/14 | Final Exam Due at 5 PM |
9/11 | last day to drop (without W) |
10/22 | last day to withdraw (with W) |
Regular attendance and participation in lectures are required for success in this course. If you miss class for any reason, you do not need to notify the instructor or TA, but it is your responsibility to catch up with what you missed (e.g., by getting lecture notes from classmates or by coming to office hours). Recorded lectures from previous years and slides will be made available for review one week prior to exams.
Homework and weekly quizzes are designed to complement lectures and build on each other, so it is essential to complete them on time. You can expect to receive feedback within a week if the work is submitted on time. Late work receives a penalty of 5% per day, unless an extension is arranged before the due date or an emergency prevents submission. Emergencies include illness that significantly impacts your ability to complete work, serious illness of a close relative, isolation/quarantine requirements or travel delays.
Post questions and check Discussions. Emails to professors often include questions
regarding course material or questions on course policies and assignments. The
answers to both kinds of questions are of interest to the entire class and are
therefore not best addressed over email. Please bring these questions to class
or post them online using Canvas Discussions, reserving email for questions of a personal
nature
. Posts and emails are typically only answered during office hours, so plan
ahead.
Complete the pre-class assignments. Class time will be used to consider concepts and processes at levels that go beyond simply “define and describe.” To participate fully in class time discussions and activities, you will need to come prepared. To help you focus on key concepts, you will need to complete the weekly quiz before synchronous meeting each week.
Relate what you’re learning to how you learn. Ever wonder why you forget a lot of what you crammed for an exam after a few weeks? Although the kinds of things you’re learning may differ from what the rabbits and rats and pigeons we talk about have to learn, many of the same mechanisms are at work. You can hone your study habits and become a more effective learner using your new-found knowledge about what conditions promote long-lasting, robust memories. For example, did you know that taking verbatim notes requires over 30 distinct cognitive operations, none of which really help you retain information? Strategies based on outlining or concept mapping are more effective because they require you to use the material as you’re hearing it.
Come to office hours. The TAs and I are collectively available for 5 hours throughout the week. You do not need to make an appointment. We might already be answering your question, so you are welcome to join at any point. You are encouraged to come to these office hours even if you have no specific question or problem you want to ask about. Office hours are a time when you can come to ask for assistance in understanding course material or assignments, or they can simply be an opportunity to chat with us about the course or college more generally.
Finally, your Association Dean is an important point of contact for any larger-scale concerns about your academic progress. He or she can refer you to the agencies or offices best suited to deal with any problem you may be facing, academic or otherwise.
This section is where you will find my policies on any topics not covered above. The purpose is to tell you ahead of time how I will handle situations where questions or disputes tend to arise. In applying these policies or in dealing with situations outside their scope, my guiding principle is equity: every student should have the same opportunity to succeed and to earn a course grade that accurately reflects their mastery of the material.
If you are unclear about any situation, ask. Unless the matter requires confidentiality, I prefer that you ask on Canvas so that the entire class can benefit.
The Psychology Department does not use course action forms, so if there’s a waitlist, you need to show up to class for the first week or so to see if enough people drop to allow you to enroll. Similarly, if you are thinking of adding the course after the start of the term, you need to attend class meetings. Regardless of when you officially enroll in the class, you are responsible for all material covered in lecture.
You can access the Canvas site even if you are on the waitlist, which will allow you to complete reading quizzes and other assignments in case you are able to enroll. You can only receive credit for assignments completed by the due date. There are no make-ups; assignments not completed before enrollment are excluded from the final grade calculation.
Recent research suggests that note-taking by writing, rather than by typing, improves conceptual learning (see Mueller & Oppenheimer 2014, available on Canvas). Additionally, with laptops and tablets, some students distract others (and themselves) by viewing non-course material during class (see Ravizza et al., 2016, on Canvas). Therefore, use of laptops, tablets and phones is prohibited during lecture. Put your phone away and have it either off or set to airplane mode (even vibrating is a distraction to you). Having your phone out during lecture will result in losing credit on your quiz score for that week.
If you feel that your note-taking will suffer without laptop or tablet, it’s easy to get my permission to use one. A permission form is available on the Canvas Resources page.
Please do not come to class if you are sick.
The midterms, which are taken in class, are closed-note and closed-book. The weekly quizzes and the final exam, which are taken at home, are open-book but must be completed individually, in accordance with the UVA Honor Code.
Alternate test times for midterms may be requested for religious holidays, UVA-required extracurricular activities (e.g., competitions or performances), or legitimate academic reasons; requests must be made and approved at least 5 days in advance. Otherwise, students who miss one or more midterms and have an excusable justification (e.g. death in the family or incapacitating illness with hospital/physician verification) may take a single, comprehensive make-up test at the end of the semester.
Per College policy, final exams can only be given on the specific date associated with the days and times our class meets. You may postpone your exam time under some circumstances with the permission of your Association Dean.
Regrade requests must be submitted in writing to a TA, and can only be accommodated if they are made within one week of when the assignment or test is returned. Your request needs to explain why your answer was correct or deserved more credit, based on the rubric and/or the course materials.
You may not distribute any course materials, including lecture recordings, without express permission from the instructor (see University Policy PROV-005).
Your participation in this course affirms that you will not share online or in person any information about an exam, any course materials, or the product of any assignment, without express instruction or permission of the professor. I expect you to fully comply with all of the provisions of the UVA Honor System whether or not you sign a pledge. Unless otherwise instructed, you must not receive nor give aid on an assignment. Breaking this trust agreement will result in zero credit for the assignment in question and referral to the Honor Committee, at my discretion.
Your submission of any assignment affirms you have not knowingly represented as your own any opinions or ideas that are attributable to another author in published or unpublished notes, study outlines, abstracts, articles, textbooks, or web pages. In other words, I expect that all assignments, reports, and exam answers are your original work and that references are cited appropriately.
This policy applies to the use of generative artificial intelligence tools such as but not limited to ChatGPT. These software programs use statistical models trained on large but limited datasets to produce text that seems to have been written by a human. Because the text produced by generative AI tools is derived from the work of others, you may not present it as your original work. Because AI models are not trained to be accurate or reliable, you may not cite an AI program as a source, and you should not rely on one to give you accurate information.
If you are unclear on whether your work meets these requirement, you need to discuss any issues with the instructor before submitting the assignment.
Grade assignments follow the following fixed scale:
A | 93 - 100 |
A- | 90 - 93 |
B+ | 87 - 90 |
B | 83 - 87 |
B- | 80- 83 |
C+ | 77 - 80 |
C | 73 - 77 |
C- | 70 - 73 |
D+ | 67 - 70 |
D | 63 - 67 |
D- | 60 - 63 |
F | 0 - 60 |
Your grades will reflect your proficiency and excellence on course objectives, not your performance relative to anyone else, so grades will not be curved. If you’re concerned about your grade, keep track of your progress early on and get help if you aren’t achieving at the level you want to.
My goal is for everyone in the class to have an equal opportunity to learn and to demonstrate their knowledge. Students with disabilities are entitled to reasonable accommodations. Contact the Student Disability Access Center (434-243-5180) for more information or to arrange accommodations. For some types of accommodations, you need to contact me to determine how they will be implemented; this is your responsibility. Please note that accommodations for flexible deadlines are generally not compatibile with the structure of the course. Students who receive accommodations for extra time or low-distraction environments will need to take exams at SDAC; you are responsible for scheduling a time slot on the day of the exam.