<p>What are they?</p>
<p>ucsd!
(ten char)</p>
<p>Case Western has one, however I don't know how it compares to other schools that have that program. I don't think many colleges offer cognitive science yet, and I don't think you will be able to find any rankings.</p>
<p>UCSD has amazing resources at the grad level for cog. sci., but like all large publics, those resources may be difficult for undergrads to really take advantage of. I don't know how UCSD works, but I'd be wary of large classes and limitied contact with professors if I were the OP and considering UCSD for cog. sci as an undergrad. </p>
<p>I'm pretty sure Case's program is new, but chances are it's decent.</p>
<p>Other schools to consider would be: MIT, Brown, Yale, UPenn, Wash U in St. Louis, Johns Hopkins, Northwestern, Caltech, and a host of smaller schools. </p>
<p>Those schools all have a "cognitive science major" as far as I can tell (though Caltech's goes by a slightly different name, and Wash U's has a very odd named (PNP)). However, cognitive science is a new field and an incredibly interdisciplinary field, combining computer science, linguistics, philosophy of mind, neuroscience, cognitive psychology and applied math (as well as even more disciplines). Just because a school doesn't have a specific "cognitive science" major doesn't mean it's a bad school to study "cognitive science" at. One can easily major in Psychology or Biology or Comp. Sci. or even Philosophy or Linguistics or Math and take a variety of neuroscience, physics, math, philosophy, linguistics, computer science courses and get an excellent education in "cognitive science". And pretty much any top private university will have a strong and abundant offering of courses, programs, facilities and research in those areas.</p>