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UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, BERKELEY
Berkeley, California
Vision Science Graduate Program
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BACKGROUND:
Title: Vision Science Graduate Program (MS, PhD)
Est: 1946
Semester
Granted last 3 years: PhD 10, MS 2
Part-time: no
HFES student chapter: no
Program: The Graduate Program in Vision Science offers both MS and PhD
degrees. These degree programs prepare students for careers in teaching and
research in vision science, optometry, ophthalmology, psychology,
bioengineering, human factors, neurobiology, cell biology, and other
disciplines. The program combines the study of the fundamentals of the vision
sciences, the study of advanced topics, and a research program selected and
conducted with the guidance of faculty members of the program. Areas of
specialization include visual psychophysics, the neurophysiology of vision,
ocular physiology, visual development, physiology and psychophysics of visual
disorders, visuomotor mechanisms, machine vision, and applied vision. Areas
related to human factors engineering include visual requirements for vehicle
guidance, detection and identification of warning signals, data compression and
computer graphics, and more. The program enthusiastically supports teaching and
research on applied problems in vision science.
Contact: Fran Stone, University of California, Berkeley, 488A Minor
Hall, Berkeley, CA 94720; 510/642-9804;
http://vision.berkeley.edu/.
Catalog:
($5.75) ASUC Store, Attn: Mail Order Department, University of California,
Berkeley, CA 94720
APPLICATION:
Deadlines: 1/5 for fellowship and admission, 2/10 admission only
Fee:
$40 (subject to change without notice)
ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS:
GPA: 3.0
GRE: 70% v, 85% q, 85% a
Other: Three letters of reference, statement of purpose, and a
background in any of the following areas: biology, psychology, physics,
engineering, optometry, mathematics, medicine, neurobiology.
Research: high
Work experience: medium
Letters: high
Interview:
low
ADMISSIONS:
Students applying last year: approx. 30 (some applicants hand-picked)
Accepted: 10
Entered program: 8
Openings/year:
average 7
TUITION AND FEES:
Resident: $2300/semester
Nonresident:
$7600/semester (subject to change without notice)
FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE:
% receiving: 65
Amount: $4000/$20000/$35000
Available: Fellowship, TA, RA (partially tuition exempt), traineeship
(tuition exempt)
Apply:
with application
DEGREE REQUIREMENTS:
MS: 20 units, no exams or languages, thesis research required, 2 years
Nonthesis option: no
PhD:
4 semesters of residence (approx. 50 units), qualifying oral exams, no
languages, dissertation research required, 5 years
CURRICULUM:
Required courses (units): Optics and Dioptics of the Eye (2), Visual
Neurophysiology and Development (2), Spatial Vision and Machine Vision (2),
Anatomy and Cell Biology of the Eye (2), Motion Perception and Binocular Vision
(2), Ethics in Vision Research (2), Graduate Student Instructor Training Course
(2), "Oxyopia" Noontime Seminar (2)
Electives: Instrumentation and Methodology in Vision Research (2),
Biomedical and Environmental Health Science Statistics (4), Neural Networks
(3), Machine Vision (3), Quantitative Methods (3), Binocular Vision (3), other
(3)
Required courses outside department: statistics
Offered: research activities in summer
Class size:
7
RESEARCH/TEACHING OPPORTUNITIES:
Research facilities: Research facilities available at Berkeley to
graduate students in vision science are unexcelled anywhere in the world.
Federally supported research facilities include modern visual psychophysics
laboratories plus computers. The optometry laboratory, housing 6,000 volumes
and subscribing to 200 periodicals, is part of the larger University of
California library, one of the finest in the world.
Teaching: All students in the PhD program are required to teach a
minimum of 2 semesters. Students can teach up to 8 semesters if they need
support. Typically, these graduate student teaching appointments are to
instruct the laboratory sections involved in the first 2 years of the optometry
curriculum.
Current research:
Aging and visual performance, ocular motility constraints, visual requirements
for vehicle guidance, data compression for computer graphics, detection and
identification of warning signals, special requirements related to ocular
diseases.
STUDENTS STATISTICS:
Active: 18 men, 16 women
First-year students: 8
Mean scores:
MS: GRE 1165 v + q, GPA 3.6; PhD: GRE 1353 v + q, GPA 3.5
FACULTY:
Anthony J. Adams, PhD 1962, Indiana U; physiological optics
Ian L. Bailey, MS 1971, Indiana U; physiological optics
Martin S. Banks, PhD 1977, U Minnesota; developmental psychology
Theodore E. Cohn, PhD 1969, U Michigan; bioengineering
Gunilla Haegerstrom-Portnoy, PhD 1983, UC Berkeley; physiological optics
Stanley A. Klein, PhD 1967, Brandeis U; physics
Clifton M. Schor, PhD 1972, UC Berkeley; physiological optics
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