Nancy wrote:
> Maybe someone has a lead for this fellow?
As I recall, both Dartmouth and UC Berkeley offer graduate studies in
this area. One of my professors when I was working on my Master's was a
psychologist who had spent some time in the Mathematics department at
Dartmouth (she served as chair for a year or so) before switching her
academic focus totally to psychology (she has Ph.D.s in both fields, of
course), and I recall her arguing that too few institutions were combining
those fields (at least some of the courses she taught at Dartmouth were
interdepartmental). I don't know how many of the programs she spoke of
still exist, but it would be worth a look. You might mention for your
acquaintance that she was a mathematical topologist and insisted that
there was a great deal of material with direct relevance for the
neuropsychologist in that area. Since my math is limited to the usual
calculus sequence and a half-dozen stat courses, I have no idea if she was
right or not, but I have enough respect for her intellect and knowledge to
suspect she had more than a vague idea what she was talking about.
Then again, anyone who actually enjoyed listening to tapes of pigmies
yodeling has spent _way_ too much time thinking about n dimentional space!
;)
Hope it helps,
Rick
--
Rick Adams
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Department of Social Sciences
Jackson Community College, Jackson, MI
"... and the only measure of your worth and your deeds
will be the love you leave behind when you're gone."
Fred Small, J.D., "Everything Possible"