Published by Sinauer Associates, an imprint of Oxford University Press.
Neuroscience is a comprehensive textbook created primarily for medical, premedical, and undergraduate students. In a single concise and approachable volume, the text guides students through the challenges and excitement of this rapidly changing field.
The book's length and accessibility of it writing are a successful combination that has proven to work equally well for medical students and in undergraduate neuroscience courses. Being both comprehensive and authoritative, the book is also appropriate for graduate and professional use.
"synopsis" may belong to another edition of this title.
Neuroscience is a comprehensive textbook created primarily for medical, premedical, and undergraduate students. In a single concise and approachable volume, the text guides students through the challenges and excitement of this rapidly changing field. The book's concise length and accessible writing are a successful combination that has proven to work equally well for medical students and in undergraduate neuroscience courses.
NEW TO THIS EDITION
Thoroughly revised and updated text
* All chapters are fully updated to reflect current research
* Substantial revisions have been made to:
- Chapter 4, Ion Channels and Transporters
- Chapter 6, Neurotransmitters and Their Receptors
- Chapter 8, Synaptic Plasticity
- ALL chapters in Unit IV, The Changing Brain
- ALL chapters in Unit V, Complex Brain Functions
Expanded full colour art
* A completely new colour palette with digital enhancements.
STUDENT SUPPLEMENTS
Companion Website
(sites.sinauer.com/neuroscience5e)
The Neuroscience companion website features review and study tools to help students master the material presented in the neuroscience course. Access to the site is free of charge and requires no access code. The site includes:
· Chapter Summaries: Concise overviews of the important topics covered in each chapter.
· Animations: Detailed animations depict many of the key topics presented in the textbook. Topics such as synaptic transmission, resting membrane potential, information processing in the eye, the stretch reflex, and many others are presented in a dynamic manner that helps students visualize and better understand many of the complex processes of neuroscience.
· Flashcards and Key Terms: Flashcard activities help students master the extensive vocabulary of neuroscience. Each chapter's set of flashcards includes all the key terms introduced in that chapter.
Sylvius: An Interactive Atlas and Visual Glossary of Human Neuroanatomy
S. Mark Williams, Leonard E. White, and Andrew C. Mace
Sylvius provides a unique computer-based learning environment for exploring and understanding the structure of the human central nervous system. Sylvius features fully annotated surface views of the human brain, as well as interactive tools for dissecting the central nervous system and viewing fully annotated cross-sections of preserved specimens and living subjects imaged by magnetic resonance. Much more than a conventional atlas, Sylvius incorporates a comprehensive, visually rich, searchable database of more than 500 neuroanatomical terms that are concisely defined and visualized in photographs, magnetic resonance images, and illustrations from the main Neuroscience text.
LECTURER SUPPLEMENTS (Only available for confirmed adopters of the textbook - see details below)
Instructor's Resource Library
The Neuroscience Instructor's Resource Library includes a variety of resources, including:
Dale Purves is Director of the Neuroscience and Behavioural Disorders program at Duke–NUS Graduate Medical School and Executive Director of the Neuroscience Research Partnership at A*STAR (both located in Singapore).
George J. Augustine is Director of the Center for Functional Connectomics in Seoul, Korea.
David Fitzpatrick is Chief Executive Officer and Scientific Director of the Max Planck Florida Institute for Neuroscience, USA.
William C. Hall is a Professor in the Department of Neurobiology at the Duke University School of Medicine, USA.
Anthony-Samuel LaMantia is a Professor of Pharmacology & Physiology at The George Washington University and Director of the GW Institute for Neuroscience, USA.
Leonard E. White is an Associate Professor in the Department of Neurobiology at the Duke University School of Medicine, USA.
"About this title" may belong to another edition of this title.