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Holocaust Studies Service-Learning Trip: Poland 2006 - Click to learn more

 

 

 

Albion brains are here - watch for them!

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Wilson class presentations: Drugs  Neuro  Vision

Albion Alum wins prestigious Women in Neuroscience award.

Dr. Debra Ann Fadool, who graduated from Albion as a biology major in 1985 and is currently an assistant professor of Biology & Neuroscience at Florida State University, was awarded the 2003 Women in Neuroscience Merck Young Investigator Award.  

View highlights of our trip to the 2002 Society for Neuroscience meeting in Orlando.

Ramachandran visited Albion and met with the neuroscience students in October.Students at Albion College have the opportunity to immerse themselves in neuroscience from several perspectives. Professors in three departments, Biology, Philosophy, and Psychology, share an interest in understanding the neural underpinnings of behavior and mental activity, and have developed a strong and growing neuroscience program at Albion. Beginning with the experience of a Freshman Seminar focusing on the mind, through numerous courses of direct relevance to neuroscience, and culminating in meaningful research addressing cutting-edge issues, Albion students gain the knowledge, insight, and skills necessary to success in graduate study or careers relating to neuroscience.
Although neuroscience as a discipline entails a common goal of
understanding the nervous system, the emphases of scientists from variousWilliam Calvin & our neuroscience students at the Orlando Neuroscience meeting. (Click for more pics) backgrounds often differ. Students who select the Neuroscience Option will be exposed to all three of these ways of approaching the topic:

  • Biology: Biologists often focus on the physiological principles that govern the function of the nervous system, from the systems level (e.g., how do various parts of the brain interact) to the cellular (how do neurons communicate) or the molecular (how do genes determine the structure of membrane-embedded proteins).

  • Philosophy: Philosophers usually come to neuroscience out of a desire to understand some aspect of the mind (as underlain by the brain). Philosophy's long-standing interest in epistemology, or how-we-know-things, leads to a desire to understand cognition, thought, and knowledge as products of the brain.

  • Psychology: Psychologists are concerned with behavior and mental activity, and examine how neural activity underlies interactions between organisms, behavior of the individual, and regulation of one's internal state. A psychologist's focus might range from the organismic down to the cellular.

Neuroscientists in all three of these disciplines often share common techniques and even common research questions, and it is sometimes difficult to distinguish between them. Neuroscience is truly inter- or cross-disciplinary, and an education in neuroscience, far from being narrow, can be a broadening and enriching experience.

Neuroscience Glossary (Word format) (html format)

 
 
 
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