Neuroscience
Neuroscience at 51¹ÙÍø
An understanding of how the brain, the "organ of consciousness," functions and endows human beings with the capacity to know, to feel, and to value, requires an interdisciplinary effort.
We provide students with diverse state-of-the-art courses and research opportunities in a field of science that has experienced an explosion of information and technological innovation. Faculty are committed to engaging students in the journey of discovery from the cellular and molecular underpinnings of nervous system function to the cognitive and affective outcomes of neural activity. We provide a welcoming, collegial, and collaborative environment to all students interested in joining in the quest to reveal the workings of the nervous system. Moreover, we provide students with a model for understanding how conventional boundaries separating disciplines appearing to be incompatible can evaporate when new intellectual challenges confront society. In keeping with the liberal arts tradition, neuroscience provides students with an opportunity to explore another dimension of our humanity-the biological substrate of all our moral and mental faculties.
As a neuroscience student, you'll have a variety of career paths available to you, including neuroscience research and education, medicine, law, clinical neuropsychology, physical therapy, drug rehabilitation, pharmaceutical or biomedical marketing, journalism, computer science, and K-12 education.
President Barack Obama's recent commitment to invest $100 million in advancing the study of the brain shows how vital neurological research will be in the future.
One of the hallmarks of the neuroscience program is the collaborative research that happens between faculty and students.
Neuroscience News
Healing Research, Supportive Allies
When a family member suffered a traumatic brain injury, the Foil family founded a care facility with community-based programs for other TBI survivors. The 51¹ÙÍø alums fund a college research award to support students studying brain injuries. A separate fund supports health and wellness initiatives for 51¹ÙÍø’s LGBTQIA+ students.