Neuroscience remains one of the fastest-growing areas of biology, at the cutting edge of technical and conceptual advances in the life sciences. If you want to know the mechanisms that animals use to hear, see, smell, and remember things, then you need to study ions, molecules, cells, neural networks, brain structure, and behavior. We will first learn about the function of the brain’s cellular computers, known as neurons. We will learn how neurons differ from other cells, how they generate electrical signals, and how they communicate with one another via synapses. We will then investigate how neurons cooperate in circuits by studying five sensory systems: vision, touch, hearing, taste, and smell. Topics include the physical and chemical bases of action potentials, synaptic transmission, and sensory transduction; anatomy; development; sensory and motor pathways; memory and learning at the molecular, cellular, and systems levels; and the neuroscience of certain brain diseases.
There are two enrollment options for this course:
• 6-credit option that includes in-person laboratories.
• 5-credit option without the lab. This will be completely online.
For both options, lectures will be recorded in advance, and you will be required to watch and take notes asynchronously. There will be a mandatory Zoom session each week (tentatively on Thursdays from 11:00 to 12:30). In addition, students will be expected to complete assigned readings from the textbook and primary literature papers, submit homework/problem sets, and take weekly quizzes.
Anticipated Credit Equivalencies:
*6 - Neurobiology with Laboratory
*5 - Neurobiology
Students successfully completing all aspects of the course will receive either 5 or 6 upper-division science credits (depending on their enrollment status).
Prerequisites:
Registration
Students should have a year of college-level general biology. Please speak with the faculty if you do not have this prerequisite. There may be options to take the course for lower-division credit.
Academic Details
health, medicine, psychology
$50 required lab fee
Students completing all aspects of the course will receive either 5 or 6 upper division science credits (depending on their enrollment status). The credits will be listed as:
*6 - Neurobiology with Laboratory
*5 - Neurobiology