Coulson earned her B.A. in philosophy at
Wellesley College in 1988, graduating
Magna Cum Laude. She worked as a Production Editor for
Garland Publishing in New York City from 1988 to 1989. She then worked as a Research Assistant from 1989 to 1990 in the Department of Psychology at
Hunter College, where she collaborated with
Virginia Valian on research involving the use of anchor points in
language learning. In 1990, she began her graduate education in Cognitive Science at University of California, San Diego, earning her M.S. in 1992 and Ph.D. in 1997. Her dissertation,
Semantic Leaps: Frame Shifting and Conceptual Blending, was published as a monograph in 2001, and is her most cited work. From 1997 to 1999, she was a Post-doctoral Fellow in the Psychology department at
University of Arizona. In 1999, she returned to University of California, San Diego as an assistant professor in the Cognitive Science department. In 2002, she earned a University of California Hellman Fellowship award, a fellowship for junior faculty across the University of California system. Her award was for her work titled "
Language Comprehension and the Space Structuring Model: Electrophysiological Investigations". In June 2004, Coulson and her graduate student, Christopher Lovett, were featured in an article for magazine
The Scientist. The article, "
Humor and Handedness", discussed her use of jokes as a high-level language input to investigate brain response differences between left- and right-handed individuals. She was promoted to Full Professor at UCSD in 2012. Coulson has earned the Innovative Research Grant, a yearly grant from The Kavli Institute for Brain and Mind, four times. For 2006-2007, she collaborated on two projects titled "
Overcoming overlearning" and
"Lesion-symptom mapping and pragmatic language comprehension". For 2014–2015, she collaborated on a project titled
"A Novel Test of the Grounded Cognition Hypothesis in Grapheme-Color Synesthetes". For 2020–2021, she collaborated on two projects titled "
Investigating the Role of Rhythmic Cortical Activity in Processing of Hierarchically Organized Linguistic and Non-linguistic Sequences in Humans and Rats" and
"Auditory deviance detection in single cells, local field potentials, and extracranial EEG". Most recently, Coulson and other UCSD Cognitive Science department members Ana Chkaidze, Anastasia Kiyonga, and
Lera Boroditsky were awarded an Innovative Research Grant for 2022-2023. Their proposed collaborative project was titled "
What are thoughts made of? Dusting neural fingerprints of internal representations using phenomenology and information-based neuroimaging". == Research ==