The programme aims totrain the professional figure of psychologist expert in neuropsychology.
The programme therefore aims to provide students with psychological knowledgeand skills in the two macro-areas central to the profession: CognitiveNeuroscience and Neuropsychological Rehabilitation. These include boththeoretical knowledge of the cognitive and affective processes underlying humanbehaviour, their mechanisms of impairment, and techniques for theirrehabilitation, as well as tools for observation, assessment, and interventionin the neuropsychological field, so that the second-cycle graduate canindependently perform the typical acts of the psychology profession.
The curriculum is based on the integration of theoretical-methodological andpractical-experiential activities. In the first year, theoretical andmethodological knowledge on cognitive neuroscience and neuropsychologicalsemeiotics is furthered, covering the entire life span, with lectures ondevelopmental age, adulthood, and healthy and pathological ageing. The secondyear includes learning activities that apply the acquired neuroscientificknowledge to the design of interventions for the rehabilitation of acquired ordevelopmental cognitive and affective disorders and the promotion ofpsychological well-being, and to the forensic context.
The teaching style is always characterised by a strong emphasis on activestudent participation during exercises, critical discussion and design ofresearch and interventions, and analysis of clinical cases. In addition, thebroad range of elective course units allows students to characterise theirstudies in a more experimental-technical or clinical-rehabilitation direction.
Practical assessment, also provided in the second year, completes thegraduate's training by providing practical skills for the application ofassessment and intervention techniques and tools typical of the psychologyprofession, particularly in the neuropsychological context. A practicalassessment test (PPV) also aims to ascertain the acquisition of these technicalskills for the purpose of exercising the profession.
Finally, the dissertation is an opportunity to critically reflect on specificaspects of the neuropsychologist's work by designing, analysing and presentingan original experimental study.