Neuroscience Minor

What's New | Seminars
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College of Charleston

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Overview

Neuroscience is a discipline that asks fundamental questions about how the brain and nervous system work in the expression of behavior. The field of neuroscience is a hybrid that integrates biology (“brain”) with psychology (“behavior”) and draws from many other related academic areas. As such, the field takes on a clear interdisciplinary approach to addressing these questions whereby multiple levels of biological organization (molecular, cellular, and systems) contribute to our understanding of the nervous system and physiological underpinnings of behavior. In the past two decades, there have been extraordinary additions to our knowledge of brain/behavior relationships.

About the Minor

The Interdisciplinary Minor in Neuroscience has been developed through a joint effort by the Departments of Biology and Psychology. However, the program is designed to draw from other areas such as Discovery Informatics, Computer Science, Anthropology, Philosophy, and Chemistry. The goal of the Minor is to provide students with a full-spectrum approach to understanding brain/behavior relationships so that they have a solid foundation to pursue neuroscience-related careers.

The Minor has been designed to facilitate interdisciplinary relationships between the sciences, social sciences and the humanities. The exploration of neuroscience is to gain insight into the control of human behavior and thus, to delve into the understanding of human nature.

At the completion of the minor, students will have obtained an understanding of molecular, cellular and systems neuroscience in a diverse group of organisms, along with a skill set for addressing and answering questions related to neuroscience research. Students will have developed an appreciation for the multidisciplinary and comparative nature of the field of neuroscience. They will have also acquired professional communication skills for presenting scientific data. This minor will serve students entering academic and professional careers in the life sciences and medicine, and in a variety of disciplines such as psychology, biology, neuropsychology, behavioral neuroscience, psychiatric nursing, clinical psychology, and behavioral genetics. Click here to see the program announcement.

We have constructed a suggested curriculum for students majoring in Biology or Psychology.

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