Optional Group:
DISCIPLINE SOCIO-ECONOMICHE, STORICO-POLITICHE E COGNITIVE - (show)
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24
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20710433 -
PHILOSOPHY OF PSYCHIATRY - LM
(objectives)
The course of Philosophy of Psychiatry is part of the program in Cognitive Sciences of Communication and Action (master level) and is included among the characterizing training activities. The course will introduce some topics that arise when we treat psychiatry as a special science and deal with it using the methods and concepts of philosophy of science. This includes discussion of such issues as the explanation, the reduction and the classification of mental disorders. Upon completion of the course students - will have gained familiarity with some of the most important philosophical questions raised by mental disorders and our attempts to understand/treat them; - will be able to critically evaluate different positions on core themes of the course; - will develop a critical thought on philosophical matters involving mental disorders, and the ability to build rigorous, clear arguments using an appropriate scientific and philosophical vocabulary.
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6
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M-FIL/01
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30
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-
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-
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-
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Core compulsory activities
|
ITA |
Non è possibile sostenere Neuroetica se si sostiene Etica e Comunicazione
20704053 -
NEUROETHICS
(objectives)
The course on neuroethics is part of the teaching activities of the curriculum in Scienze Cognitive della Comunicazione e dell’Azione. The course aims at introducing and discussing the basic notions of neuroethics, an interdisciplinary research field at the interplay between moral philosophy, moral psychology and cognitive (neuro)science. In particular, the course will focus on the cognitive and motivational basis of moral reasoning and judgment.
The aim of the course is to provide students with the tools for understanding, analyzing and discussing philosophical and scientific texts on the course topics, learning to navigate the contemporary debate. By the end of the course, students are supposed to have acquired a basic knowledge of the main topics in the field of neuroethics and a more in-depth knowledge of selected topics, and to be able to efficiently navigate the relevant literature.
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6
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M-FIL/03
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30
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-
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-
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-
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Core compulsory activities
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ITA |
20710113 -
ETHIC AND COMUNICATION
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Also available in another semester or year
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20710100 -
NEUROSCIENZE DELLA COMUNICAZIONE E DEL LINGUAGGIO - LM
(objectives)
In this class students will learn - the main features of verbal and non verbal communication - the cognitive substrates of human communication - the interconnection between language, perception, memory, attention, and executive functions - the neuroanatomical substrates of human communication
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6
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M-PSI/01
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36
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-
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-
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-
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Core compulsory activities
|
ITA |
20710268 -
CONTEMPORARY HISTORY - POSTGRADUATE
(objectives)
The course aims to give students chance of acquiring analytical skills in order to identify the many factors involved in the dynamics of historical processes and understand their interconnections. The students will also develop a research method and investigation abilities in order to discover the inner complexity of the present age in its historical depth; they will be educated on how to understand otherness disclosing in the study of human events that constitute historical development.
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6
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M-STO/04
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36
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-
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-
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-
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Core compulsory activities
|
ITA |
20710269 -
History of Parties and political Information
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Also available in another semester or year
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20711192 -
PSICOLOGIA DELLE EMOZIONI E DELLA COMUNICAZIONE MULTIMODALE
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Also available in another semester or year
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20710432 -
PHILOSOPHY OF MIND - LM
(objectives)
The course of Philosophy of Mind is part of the program in Cognitive Sciences of Communication and Action (master level) and is included among the characterizing training activities. The course will introduce some central topics in empirically informed philosophy of mind including the functionalist view of the mind, the nature of mental representations, the mechanistic approach to cognitive neuroscience, the naturalization of consciousness and self-consciousness, the possibility of a clinical cognitive neuroscience. Upon completion of the course students - will have gained familiarity with some of the most important issues in the philosophy of mind driven by cognitive sciences; - will be able to critically evaluate different positions on core themes of the course; - will develop a critical thought on philosophical matters involving the mind, and the ability to build rigorous, clear arguments using an appropriate scientific and philosophical vocabulary.
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6
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M-FIL/01
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30
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-
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-
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-
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Core compulsory activities
|
ITA |
20710738 -
STORIA DELLE SCIENZE DEL COMPORTAMENTO E DELLE NEUROSCIENZE -LM
(objectives)
This course aims will examine the historical development of the main themes, problems and theories of behavioural sciences and neuroscience. In particular, the course aims to foster a critical understanding of the historical development of the major themes, problems, and models of scientific explanation on behavior and psychological processes, from the earliest naturalized conceptualizations to experimental psychology and contemporary neuroscience. The evolution of the behavioural sciences and neuroscience will be discussed in its relationship with the history of philosophical ideas and other human sciences such as sociology and anthropology, in its close intertwining with the natural and biological sciences. At the same time the history of the behavioural sciences and neuroscience will be situated in the context of concrete history, such as the material, economic and techological transofrmations. Particular attention will be given to the examination of the evolution of neuroscientific models of explanation of cognitive and communication processes. The course will also examine the history of the cultural and moral impact of developments of the behavioural sciences and neuroscience with particular regard to the applications of cognitive science, neuropsychopharmacology and neurotechnologies in the 20th century. The course aims to achieve these learning outcomes: 1) an organic knowledge of the major research programs, concepts, and problems of the behavioural sciences and neuroscience; 2) the ability to contextualize, analyze, and critically interpret the ideas and models of explanation of the behavioural sciences and neuroscience also in relation to other research disciplines, material history, culture, ethics, and technological evolution; 3) the historical and theoretical tools for understanding the transformations of psychological and neuroscientic models of cognitive and communication processes. 4) the lexical and conceptual tools necessary to the study of the history of the behavioural sciences, neuroscience, and for acquiring good analytical and argumentative skills in written and oral form.
The monographic part of the program this year aims to critically illustrate the history of the contribution of the behavioral sciences and neuroscience to the understanding of the nature of desire and the processes of construction of habits and their control/dyscontrol, with particular focus on the case of pathological addictions (behavioral/ substance/affective addictions).
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6
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M-STO/05
|
36
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Core compulsory activities
|
ITA |
|
Optional Group:
TEORIE E TECNICHE DELL'INFORMAZIONE E DELLA COMUNICAZIONE - (show)
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18
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|
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20704050 -
LEXICON AND SEMANTICS
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Also available in another semester or year
|
20710075 -
LINGUISTICA E GIORNALISMO
(objectives)
The course aims to illustrate how the historical perspective, the sociolinguistics, the pragmatics and the semiotics can analyze the language of newspapers highlighting the lexical, syntactic and morphological features and the intercultural aspects of different texts. A part of course will focus on the cognitive paradigm, the titles and the metaphors. There are no prerequisites. Specific activities could be organized to support the study of the foreign students and the working students.
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6
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L-LIN/01
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36
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Core compulsory activities
|
ITA |
20710322 -
LINGUISTICA E SOCIETA' - LM
(objectives)
The course aims at providing students with a basic knowledge of methods, tools and approaches characterizing sociolinguistics, taking also into account the epistemological problems concerning its adjacency to other branches of linguistic and social knowledge. At the end of the course, students will write an essay showing their competence in gathering data and analyzing them in sociolinguistic perspective.
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6
|
L-LIN/01
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36
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Core compulsory activities
|
ITA |
20704054 -
AESTHETICS - POSTGRADUATE
(objectives)
The course aims to provide students with advanced knowledge of the vocabulary and the fundamental problems of aesthetics. Specific attention will be deserved to some of the most significant authors in the discipline. Students will be able to apply the acquired knowledge to discuss and to develop arguments both in a theorical and in a historical perspective. Students are expected to acquire the following skills: Advanced critical thinking on aesthetics; Advanced language and argumentation skills about the topic of the course; Capacity to read and analyse texts about Aesthetics; Oral and/or written presentation (Italian or English)
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6
|
M-FIL/04
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36
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Core compulsory activities
|
ITA |
20709714 -
FUNZIONI E PATOLOGIE DEL LINGUAGGIO E DELLA COMUNICAZIONE - LM
(objectives)
The course has two main goals. The first one is to propose an education finalized to learn the main classification methods of language disorders in pathologies such as aphasia, autism, schizophrenia. The second is to illustrate how the investigation of language disorders might be used to inform theoretical models on language functioning.
At the end of the course, the student will be able to: a) use knowledge on linguistic pathologies to reflect on the more general issue of the cognitive plausibility of the theoretical models proposed to account for the functioning of language; b) read and understand experimental scientific articles written in English dealing with issues relating to the cognitive foundations of language.
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6
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M-FIL/05
|
36
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Core compulsory activities
|
ITA |
20710610 -
Storia dell'intelligenza artificiale - LM
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Also available in another semester or year
|
20710609 -
Word design and advertising - LM -
(objectives)
The course aims to define the Adv Language as a powerful tool of verbal-iconic design. A series of teaching/learning activities complete the presentation of the cognitive models and the explication of the grammar that, marking slogans, headlines, jingles, captions and trademarks, change the objects we live by. In this perspective the creative and innovative Adv Language is described as a perceptive transformer code, that has to understood through the different phases of project, realization, and representation. In this process the activities of naming regarding the products and the promotional messages are a fundamental strategy of conceptual construction. With the course, the students also acquire the specific skill for transcribing them in a repository and analyzing complex icono-texts as the tv commercial and that of using their a-grammatical rules and their non-senses in a coherent and creative way. The course is divided in three parts: 1.From the spatial design to the word design; 2.The grammar of the Adv Language between rules and semantic mappings; 3. The adv language around the bod mail-order catalogues and the trademarks of Cosmetics, Fashion, Food and Sport. Workshops, experiments and surveys improve the theorical study with aapplied training.
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6
|
L-LIN/01
|
36
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Core compulsory activities
|
ITA |
|
Optional Group:
A SCELTA DELLO STUDENTE - Non è possibile inserire tra gli esami a scelta ulteriori “Idoneità di lingua” conseguite al CLA - Il Tirocinio di Ricerca può essere inserito solo se proposto dal docente - (show)
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12
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|
|
|
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20711265 -
LABORATORY OF SELF-CONTROL AND EMOTIONAL REGULATION. THEORIES AND PRACTICES.
(objectives)
What is self-control and what is emotion regulation? How do they work; what psychological and brain mechanisms do they depend on? Why is voluntary control of psychological processes, such as staying focused, resisting distractions, managing a negative emotion, inhibiting rumination or stopping the mind from wandering, so difficult? And why does voluntary control of actions often fail? That is, for what reasons do we relapse into habits we no longer want to have, into various forms of addiction, or frequently fail to contain an inappropriate impulse or the expression of a potentially harmful emotion? Are there techniques or exercises capable to improve self-control and emotion regulation? What psychological and brain mechanisms are they based on? How are they performed and what evidence of effectiveness exists in the scientific literature? The Workshop on Self-Control and Emotional Regulation. Theories and Practices, aims to provide participants with knowledge of the main theoretical elements and models of explanations of the processes of self-control and emotion regulation, between neuroscience, psychosocial science and philosophy. At the same time, the Lab aims to teach exercises and techniques useful for improving self-regulatory capacity, including several Mindfulness based practices, illustrating its scientific basis and experimental verification of effectiveness. At the end of the Workshop, the student should know and understand the main explanatory models of self-control and emotion regulation and will have a basic mastery of the principal and scientifically validated techniques, exercises and trainings for cognitive enhancement, self-control and emotional regulation. If the number of participants will be sufficient, the Workshop may involve conducting an experimental study designed for measuring the impact of training on some basic variables of self-control, mood, impulsivity, and perceived stress level.
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6
|
|
36
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Elective activities
|
ITA |
20711247 -
CLINICAL PSYCHOLOGY
(objectives)
The course aims to provide students with knowledge on the main psychopathological spectra and nosographic systems of personality disorders. Space will be given to the presentation of clinical and psychodiagnostic assessment tools for the evaluation of normal and pathological personality traits.
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6
|
M-PSI/08
|
36
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Elective activities
|
ITA |
20711191 -
EPISTEMOLOGY OF COMMUNICATION
(objectives)
The course aims to use the tools of epistemology to study communicative phenomena. To this end, we will first provide an introduction to the fundamental concepts of the theory of knowledge and the fundamental aspects of the scientific method. Some issues of social epistemology will then be addressed, such as epistemological disagreement, testimony and beliefs, the epistemology of experts. At the end of the course, students will have acquired fundamental notions of philosophy of science and some tools to conduct the methodological and epistemological analysis of the communication models developed in various disciplinary sectors (such as cognitive science, psychology, ethology, theory of games).
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6
|
M-FIL/01
|
36
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Elective activities
|
ITA |
20710572 -
BIOLAW
|
Also available in another semester or year
|
20702741 -
ENGLISH LANGUAGE - ADVANCED COURSE
(objectives)
The course is aimed at providing students with knowledge of the morphological, syntactic, semantic and lexical properties of the English language, as well as skills and competences corresponding to the B2 level of the Common European Framework of Reference for languages. At the end of the course, students will be able to recognise and use correctly skills and language structures corresponding to the B2 level of the Common European Framework of Reference for languages.
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6
|
L-LIN/12
|
36
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Elective activities
|
ITA |
Può essere inserito in piano solo se proposto dal docente
20710355 -
RESEARCH INTERNSHIP
(objectives)
For teaching purposes and on the basis of an assessment of merit, students may carry out an internship in public or private research centres. The request to carry out a research traineeship is proposed by a lecturer of the degree course and submitted to the Didactic Coordination Committee, which then decides on the recognition of the CFUs (maximum 6) to be included in the student's choice.
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6
|
|
-
|
-
|
36
|
-
|
Elective activities
|
ITA |
20710117 -
LABORATORIO DI FOTOGIORNALISMO
|
Also available in another semester or year
|
20710040 -
LABORATORIO DI LINEAMENTI DI GENERE
(objectives)
The Course provides for an introduction to the main periods, issues, and authors, in feminist and gender studies and movements. The Course is intended to the acquisition of historical and analytical tools, both in reading and in debating. International students can ask for a final exam in their native language or in English.
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6
|
|
36
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Elective activities
|
ITA |
20710207 -
Laboratory of environmental and territory analysis
(objectives)
The course is devoted to the profiling of a new field of research - through the contribution of political philosophy, aesthetics, history of economics, environmental justice, social geography, urban studies, etc.- to the acquisition of analytical and interpretative conceptual tools in relation to the general dimensions of “environment” and “territory”. International students can ask for a final exam in their native language or in English.
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6
|
|
36
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Elective activities
|
ITA |
20704090 -
LABORATORY: MUSIC LANGUAGE
|
Also available in another semester or year
|
20710383 -
LABORATORIO DI SCIENZE COGNITIVE - LM
|
Also available in another semester or year
|
20710194 -
RUSSIAN AND EURASIAN CONTEMPORARY HISTORY
(objectives)
The course has the following learning objectives: • Getting to know the historical trends characterizing contemporary age in Russian and Eurasian territories that first were part of the Russian Empire and then of the USSR; • Understanding the major questions and interpretations of Russian and Eurasian history in contemporary historiography; • Appreciating how cultural, political, religious, social, geopolitical elements have constantly been intertwined in the historical development of the area; • Becoming aware of how that characteristic ‘Russian otherness’ has been shaped in contemporary age through the relation with global events and concurrent differentiation processes .
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6
|
M-STO/04
|
36
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Elective activities
|
ITA |
22910283 -
Philosophy and ethics of technology
(objectives)
The course aims at giving the students awareness, understanding, and autonomy of judgment in regard to the ethical implications of the introduction of the new technologies in the field of media education and e-learning. In this light, we will discuss questions such as the pervasiveness of algorithmically-based decision-making, the right to privacy, the morally controversial advancements of Artificial Intelligence, and the risks that the infosphere poses to individual autonomy.
|
6
|
M-FIL/03
|
36
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Elective activities
|
ITA |
20710561 -
CONTEMPORARY ITALIAN LITERATURE - LM
(objectives)
The course aims to deepen the authors , moments , genres and themes that characterize the Italian literature of our time , from the early twentieth century , taking into account also , as much as possible , the links with the other systems of literary expression , other arts , the literatures of other countries , as well as the history and geography of our country. Critical and analytical tools that will be used during the course will also help , the student , to hone their reading mode .
|
6
|
L-FIL-LET/11
|
36
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Elective activities
|
ITA |
20710577 -
Comunicazione persuasiva LM - mod A
|
Also available in another semester or year
|
20710706 -
LOGICS OF INFORMATION AND ACTION
(objectives)
We live in an information network and in an exchange of opinions that is ubiquitous and constant – a net of epistemic acts that we exchange with other agents and affect what we end up believing and deciding. Working with information implies more and more that we face the social effects of this – and these are today faster and faster, and we get a glimpse of them in real time. However, the more agents we have involved, the harder to understand the dynamics of information release turn to be.
This course introduces a formal toolkit that helps in this enterprise. In particular, the course aims at securing: (1) the understanding of the problems of reasoning that can be triggered by the release of information; (2) the understanding of models that capture the dynamic effects of information release, and the conceptual problems they raise; (3) the problems connected to the representation of belief-merging and, in general, the relations between individual and collective notions of epistemic attitudes; (4) the understanding of the conditions at which consensus is possible, the role it can play, and the relation between the information release policies, the connection of the epistemic network, and the hierarchies and trust distribution in epistemic communities.
(3) e (4) presuppose (1) and (2). In turn, the last two objectives come with a view on the social impact that the information release policies have on a community of epistemic agents. The course employs a varied package of methods and tools, especially those from Epistemic Logic and Dynamic Epistemic Logic, but also, to a lesser extent, notions and methods from Judgement Aggregation and Network Epistemology, which the course will briefly introduce.
|
6
|
M-FIL/02
|
36
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Elective activities
|
ITA |
20710653 -
LABORATORIO DI SCRITTURA SCIENTIFICA - LM
|
Also available in another semester or year
|
20710737 -
LABORATORIO DI GIORNALISMO DI CRONACA - LM
(objectives)
The course aims to provide students with the fundamental tools to know and do news journalism today, from the role of the reporter to the contribution to investigations, up to research tools. Trainees will then be able to - Learn how to construct an investigative enquiry - Learning methods for researching sources, access to databases, relations with press offices, new media resources - Compare the right and duty of freedom of information in Italy and in the major western countries - Equip themselves with fact-checking tools in the age of disinformation and post-truths - Challenge themselves with classroom exercises - Meet reporters specialising in news (crime, legal, pink, sports, the evolution of reporting in emergencies, from terrorism to health and environmental crises).
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6
|
|
36
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Elective activities
|
ITA |
|