alexr_rwx: (deus ex machina)
Alex R ([personal profile] alexr_rwx) wrote2010-04-21 01:05 am

we're going to do it with computers

Talking with Mike today, I brought up some of my frustrations with the CS program here, wondering whether I should switch to Cognitive Science or something else.

In a lot of ways, cogsci sounds kind of like what I want to do, and as I understand it, the program here is quite good. Discussing with Mike today, though, we uncovered two objections to my switching over: (a) they only have so much funding, and probably won't admit many students in the near future, and (b) to be in the cogsci program, it's pretty important that you care about cognition.

He said, and this made me feel really good: he likes that my goal is building software, because that's what he's out to do now too. Questions of psychological plausibility are only so interesting. (and they are kind of interesting.) But we're not going to do machine translation with brains, we're going to do it with computers, and hopefully it'll be useful to people.

(the downside, of course: I may have to take some dumb CS distribution requirement courses, which I feel like I shouldn't have to take because, y'know, I've already got an MS in this, and it's senselessly difficult to get my classes from gatech to transfer here.)
lindseykuper: Photo of me outside. (Default)

[personal profile] lindseykuper 2010-04-22 05:07 am (UTC)(link)
Schools like IU (and maybe NU too?) don't seem particularly well equipped to deal with people who come in with an MS already. I'm also wondering if it's a particular kind of person who tends to switch schools after the MS, and a particular kind of school who attracts that kind of person, or if it's usually just individual circumstance. For me, I think switching partway through a Ph.D. would be a really bad idea. It would destroy my momentum.

[identity profile] sstrickl.livejournal.com 2010-04-22 01:07 pm (UTC)(link)
In my case, I was in the MS program at GT, not a PhD program, so... it was basically my way of taking a couple of years to decide whether research was really what I wanted to do, and really, it didn't help as much on that score as my later industry stretch. It was really just a way of putting off the decision about industry or PhD in a fit of procrastination :)