Master thesis seminar – 2-IKV-921/15

The purpose of this interdisciplinary course is to provide support to students writing their master thesis in the fields of cognitive science. Students are expected to develop the concept for their master’s thesis, present and discuss their plans for their theses, issues and problems. The course provides room both for presentations and discussions. It also includes participation in the MEi:CogSci conference.

Learning outcomes: After the course, you should be able to: (1) to formulate and follow a scientific question relevant to cognitive science, (2) to plan, conduct, document and present scientific work, (3) to write an extended scientific abstract, (4) to defend your research and constructively deal with critical commentary, (5) to constructively participate in a peer-review process, (6) to get involved in collaborative work in physical and virtual environments, (7) to engage in scientific discourse, (8) to communicate your expertise in order to contribute constructive criticism to the work of others.

News

23. 3. 2017
In your longer presentation (20-25 min + 10 min discussion), focus on the following: (1) motivation (state-of-the-art in the area of your focus, brief survey of related approaches); (2) research question (is it well formulated?); (3) assumptions behind your approach; (4) experimental design / computational model specification.

Syllabus

Date Content
22.2. Introduction to the course, requirements and grading, plan for the semester.
01.3. No class - attending the lecture of prof. Stransky on neurophilosophy.
08.3. Presentations of your mobility projects to 1st year students (joint meeting).
15.3. How to prepare your master thesis. Master Thesis Concept requirement.
22.3. No class
29.3. Presentations: Sedláček, Rerichová, XXX
05.4 Presentations: XXX
12.4. Presentations: Šlahorová, Osrman, XXX
19.4. Presentations: Hrašková, XXX
26.4. TBA
03.5. TBA
10.5. Information about abstract submission for conference, peer review process, final submissions.
17.5. No class

Course requirements and grading

  • 40% - quality of the master thesis concept (following the template provided)
  • 30% - oral presentations of your thesis in the seminar (twice)
  • 20% - activity, peer feedback, participation in two peer-reviews of extended abstracts (for the conference)
  • 10% - active participation at MEi:CogSci conference (talk)
  • Overall score: A > 90%, B > 80%, C > 70%, D > 60%, E > 50%, else Fx.