Mind / Brain / Behavior -- Interfaculty Initiative at Harvard University

Foundation Courses             

A major challenge in a broad multi-disciplinary area like Mind/Brain/Behavior is the development of a common core of basic knowledge. This common language can allow students and scholars from a wide range of fields and backgrounds to communicate fruitfully on topics beyond the areas of their immediate expertise. The MBB tracks seek to help students develop such a knowledge base by offering a set of "foundation" courses. In the first two years, two lecture courses -- Science B-62 (The Human Mind: Introduction to Mind, Brain, and Behavior) and Molecular and Cellular Biology 80 (Neurobiology of Behavior) -- help students gain a broad exposure to the physiological and behavioral bases of concerns addressed in the MBB disciplines. Supplementing these MBB courses are other introductory course requirements for the specific areas covered in each track. In the final two years, the emphasis moves from breadth to depth of knowledge and toward more independent work. As juniors, students select from a number of Interdisciplinary Seminars in Mind/Brain/Behavior to gain an appreciation for the detailed study of a particular phenomenon or issue. As seniors, these students prepare honors theses and share their thesis research in a thesis seminar, Interdisciplinary Research Workshop in Mind/Brain/Behavior. Catalog listings and more detailed descriptions of the foundation courses follow.

Science B-62 (The Human Mind: Introduction to Mind, Brain, and Behavior)

This courses provides MBB students with a general introduction to topics relevant to all the MBB tracks. It addresses foundational questions such as, “How can the mind be studied scientifically? Is the mind a computer? How did evolution shape the mind and brain? How should we think about nature and nurture? How can the brain generate thought and perception? What is consciousness?” It addresses specific faculties of the brain such as visual and auditory perception, memory, attention, reasoning, imagery, language, the social and nonsocial emotions, self-knowledge, love, sex, and violence. It presents the neural, computational, developmental, phylogenetic, and adaptive dimensions of our psychological faculties, and discusses research from psychology, neuroscience, evolutionary biology, linguistics, anthropology, philosophy, and the arts.

spring term, Professor Steven Pinker

Tuesdays and Thursdays, 1:30 a.m. - 3 p.m., and a weekly sixty-minute section, Science Center B

An introduction to the workings of the human psyche as illuminated by experimental psychology, neuroscience, genetics, evolution, artificial intelligence, and the social sciences. The course will introduce major approaches to the study of the mind such as psychoanalysis, behaviorism, cognitive neuroscience, and evolutionary psychology; controversies such as nature-nurture, consciousness, and free will; and specific topics such as perception, reasoning, language, emotion, sexuality, violence, humor, and self.
NOTE: Students who have taken Science B-29 (Evolution of Human Nature) may count that in place of Science B-62.

Sophomore Year: Molecular and Cellular Biology 80 (Neurobiology of Behavior)

This course covers the topic central to all students in MBB tracks: the fundamentals of brain structure and function. These fundamentals will provide a common background knowledge important for all tracks. For example, students in the Mind, Brain, and Behavioral Sciences track in History and Science, it is important to understand theories of neuron and brain function in order to trace the development of these views. For students in the Philosophy track, it is important to have a realistic conception of how the brain actually works when, for example, discussing the relationship between mind and body. For students in the Computational Neuroscience track in Computer Science, it is important to understand how real neurons work in order to develop more biologically realistic computational models. For students in the Psychology track, it is important to understand behavior in terms of cellular function and anatomical circuitry to provide new insights on psychological theories. For the Neurobiology track in Biology, this course provides an initial view of cellular processes and systems which will be further developed in higher level courses. Even if the final focus of the concentration designed by individual students does not include biological experimentation, it is important that all students keep in mind the constraints of biological knowledge.

spring term, Professors Joshua Sanes and Jeff Lichtman

Tuesdays and Thursdays 1 - 2:30 p.m., and a weekly ninety-minute section, Science Center C

An introduction to the ways in which the brain controls mental activities. The course covers the cells and signals that process and transmit information, and the ways in which neurons form circuits that change with experience. Topics include the neurobiology of perception, learning, memory, language, emotion, and mental illness. Note: This course, when taken for a letter grade, meets the Core area requirement for Science B. The course is open to students with little formal training in biology.

News and Events

This Monday, May 5 at 7:30pm: Join the Harvard Society for Mind/Brain/Behavior for a launch party for their annual publication, The Harvard Brain. Special guest speaker, Randy Buckner! Click here for more info!