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LATIN H: Introductory Latin Prose Composition
4.00 Credits
Harvard University
Practice in the translation of sentences and connected prose passages from English into Latin, with review of Latin syntax.
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LATIN H - Introductory Latin Prose Composition
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LIFESCI 100r: Experimental Research in the Life Sciences
4.00 Credits
Harvard University
A laboratory course that immerses students in a dynamic project-based research environment. Participate in experimental projects directly linked with ongoing faculty research. Students select a project from the following research tracks: neurobiology, microbial sciences, cell biology, and synthetic biology. New projects, including some in other research fields, are offered every term. In a highly collaborative atmosphere, students form a fully-functional and diverse research group based on the sharing of ideas and progress reports between projects.
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LIFESCI 120: Global Health Threats
4.00 Credits
Harvard University
The multidisciplinary application of epidemiology, molecular biology and genetics, pathogenesis, drug discovery, immunology and vaccine development, and economic analysis to understanding and combating major threats to human health in developing countries. Emphasis will be on critical readings and scientific writing. Grades will be based on papers in which students will propose the application of multidisciplinary approaches to global health threats not covered in lecture.
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LIFESCI 1a: An Integrated Introduction to the Life Sciences: Chemistry, Molecular Biology, and Cell Biology
4.00 Credits
Harvard University
What are the fundamental features of living systems? What are the molecules imparting them and how do their chemical properties explain their biological roles? The answers form a basis for understanding the molecules of life, the cell, diseases, and medicines. In contrast with traditional presentations of relevant scientific disciplines in separate courses, we take an integrated approach, presenting chemistry, molecular biology, biochemistry, and cell biology framed within central problems such as the biology of HIV and cancer.
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LIFESCI 1a - An Integrated Introduction to the Life Sciences: Chemistry, Molecular Biology, and Cell Biology
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LIFESCI 1b: An Integrated Introduction to the Life Sciences: Genetics, Genomics, and Evolution
4.00 Credits
Harvard University
What is the basis for inherited traits? How do traits change over time - between generations and species? This course takes an integrated approach, showing how evolution and genetics are intimately related and how genomics provides tools to analyze case studies of human disease (e.g., autism, schizophrenia), normal variation (e.g. lactose "intolerance"), and evolution (e.g., the Neandertal genome, language). Quantitative methods essential for interpreting genetic data are introduced. This class has been newly redesigned for 2010-2011.
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LIFESCI 1b - An Integrated Introduction to the Life Sciences: Genetics, Genomics, and Evolution
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LIFESCI 2: Evolutionary Human Physiology and Anatomy
4.00 Credits
Harvard University
Why is the human body the way that it is? This course explores human anatomy and physiology from an integrated framework, combining functional, comparative, and evolutionary perspectives on how organisms work. Major topics, which follow a life-course framework, include embryogenesis, metabolism and energetics, growth and development, movement and locomotion, food and digestion, stress and disease, and reproduction. Also considered is the relevance of human biology to contemporary issues in human health and biology.
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LING 110: Introduction to Linguistics
4.00 Credits
Harvard University
An introduction to contemporary linguistic theory and methods of linguistic analysis: phonetic transcription, phonological, morphological, and syntactic analysis, and methods in comparative and historical linguistics. Some psycholinguistic aspects of language will also be examined. The discussion will draw on data from a wide variety of languages.
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LING 112a: Introduction to Syntactic Theory
4.00 Credits
Harvard University
An introduction to syntactic theory, analysis and argumentation in the model of generative grammar. Discusses analyses and hypotheses of grammatical structure forming the foundation of current syntactic theory. Emphasis on constituent structure analysis, motivation for transformations, constraints on rule application and conditions on representations. Survey of syntactic phenomena, including argument structure, movement, and anaphora.
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LING 112a - Introduction to Syntactic Theory
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LING 112b: Intermediate Syntax
4.00 Credits
Harvard University
Continuation of 112a. Fundamental principles and parameters of Government and Binding Theory.
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LING 112b - Intermediate Syntax
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LING 115a: Introduction to Phonetics and Phonology
4.00 Credits
Harvard University
Analysis of phonetic and phonological phenomena from a wide variety of languages. Topics include distinctive feature theory, underlying and surface representations, the abstractness of phonological representations, rules and their ordering, language acquisition and change. Training in phonetic transcription, spectrogram ("voiceprint") reading, and hypothesis-testing in phonological analysis.
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LING 115a - Introduction to Phonetics and Phonology
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