The Iowa Perspective
Vision
The Developmental Science training area at the University of Iowa seeks
to understand processes that underlie development. Four central themes
follow from our focus on process:
- Development happens step-by-step as each change in the organism
sets the stage for future changes in a continual dialogue between
stability and change.
- Development is a product of processes sensitive to influences from
neurons to neighborhoods. Brain, body, environment, social relationships,
and large-scale social systems are all intertwined.
- Processes happen in real time, yet their effects accumulate over
longer time scales. Thus, developmental scientists must integrate
different temporal ìviewsî of how development happens.
- Neither the course nor the outcome of development is prescribed
ahead of time. Rather, development emerges as each individual follows
a unique pathway characterized by adaptive and maladaptive outcomes.
Scholarship
Critically, this process-oriented view offers more than just a theoretical
backdrop for our work—it permeates the questions we ask, the methods
we use, and the nature of our science. This IOWA view of Developmental
Science necessitates:
- Research that cuts across domains such as perception,
cognition, action, temperament, social processes, and basic biological
mechanism.
- A cross-disciplinary approach as we seek understanding
at multiple levels of analysis. Thus, we draw on many disciplines
and methodologies including cognitive and affective neuroscience,
computational modeling, computer science, movement science, psychoneuroimmunology,
engineering, speech pathology, and linguistics.
- The use of sound experimental methods and a rigorous
approach to behavioral observation, analysis, and description.
Mission
Considered in this context, the IOWA view of Developmental Science leads
naturally to a unique training and outreach mission:
- We seek to train students in a broad array of theories and methodologies
both within and outside the traditional boundaries of developmental
psychology.
- We focus our training around fundamental questions of process.
- We seek to hire new faculty who share our vision, who can contribute
to our training mission, and who bridge disciplinary boundaries.
- We encourage dialogue and research collaborations that support our
interdisciplinary focus and further our understanding of developmental
process.
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Prospective Graduate Students
PhD Program
In addition to the formal Ph.D. curriculum, our students take advantage
of an exciting, active developmental community at the University of Iowa.
Our PhD program is unparalleled in the quality of its training. In particular
we offer:
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Size and breadth: With six top
researchers in developmental science (and other affiliated faculty
throughout the department and the university), the University of
Iowa Developmental Science program is unique in its size. Our research
interests cover perception, cognition, language, biology, and social
behavior, and we study development from infancy to late childhood
(and in animal models) giving us broad coverage of development.
Finally, our faculty represents a range of theoretical viewpoints:
dynamical systems approaches, connectionism, ecological views, developmental
systems theory and applied psychology are well represented.
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Resources: Our students have access
to the latest methodological innovations and including advanced
developmental psychobiology techniques, a variety of infant looking
and listening procedures, automated eye-tracking technologies for
adults and infants, virtual reality simulations, innovative methods
for recording and analyzing real behavior, and cutting edge computational
techniques.
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Unique course work: Our innovative
seminar organizes developmental science by core-mechanism (learning,
endogenous activity, caregiver-mediated-learning) rather than by
domain to stress core mechanisms across neurological, physical,
social, perceptual and cognitive development. In addition our students
are encouraged to explore interdiscplinary courses in other departments
and areas.
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Proven success: Our graduates have a track record of success. Each year our students present at many national each year and author a number of first-authored papers. This success translates to tenure-track jobs at excellent universitys, and first-rate post-doctoral training sites.
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An active research community: Researchers
in the Developmental Science area have a proven track record of
success, garnering $2.2 million in grant funding this year alone,
and over 200 publications since 2000. In addition, all faculty in the area
are core faculty in the Iowa Center for Developmental and Learning Sciences
(ICDLS), an interdisciplinary research center that brings together diverse
faculty from the University of Iowa community to study the processes that
underlie developmental change in both typical and atypical populations.
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Interaction: There are many developmental
colloquia and research presentations during the year; developmental
faculty and students regularly present at the departmental
brown bag; developmental scientists from other universities
are invited to give departmental colloquia;
and each year one of the top developmental scientists in the country
is invited to give the Spiker Memorial Lecture. In addition, we recently hosted an international conference on connectionist and dynamic systems approaches to development.
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| If you are thinking about applying to
our Ph.D. program in Developmental Science and want to learn more
about the program and the affiliated faculty, please contact our
training area coordinator, John Spencer at: |
E-Mail: |
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Office Phone: |
319.335.2482 |
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Postal Mail: |
Dept. of Psychology
E11 Seashore Hall
The University of Iowa
Iowa City, IA 52242 |
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