Fundamental Neuroscience, 3rd Edition introduces graduate and upper-level undergraduate students to the full range of contemporary neuroscience. Addressing instructor and student feedback on the previous edition, all of the chapters are rewritten to make this book more concise and student-friendly than ever before. Each chapter is once again heavily illustrated and provides clinical boxes describing experiments, disorders, and methodological approaches and concepts. A companion web site contains test questions, and an imagebank of the figures for ready use in presentations, slides, and handouts.
Capturing the promise and excitement of this fast-moving field, Fundamental Neuroscience, 3rd Edition is the text that students will be able to reference throughout their neuroscience careers!
New to this edition: * 30% new material including new chapters on Dendritic Development and Spine Morphogenesis, Chemical Senses, Cerebellum, Eye Movements, Circadian Timing, Sleep and Dreaming, and Consciousness * Companion website with figures, web links to additional material, and test questions * Additional text boxes describing key experiments, disorders, methods, and concepts * Multiple model system coverage beyond rats, mice, and monkeys * Extensively expanded index for easier referencing
Customer Reviews:
Customer Rating: Summary: Better than Kandel and Schwartz Comment: More detailed and therefore suitable for the basic neuroscientist than Kandel and Schwartz. A good review to read before comprehensive exams for the Neuroscience PhD. All the authors are recognized experts in the field. An excellent treatment of systems and cognitive neuroscience, including emotion and motivation. Some may find the molecular details a little much, but this is what textbooks are for. Nobody ever said neuroscience was easy! Customer Rating: Summary: Absolutely the most hideous scientific writing... Comment: ...I've come across...what is it with neuroscientists?...prior to this book I had thought Kandell and Schwartz's "Principle's of Neuroscience" was the most poorly written...in both cases the authors' primary goal seems to be one of obfuscation...perhaps an example would serve better -- from this book when discussing the hierarchy of nervous system organization:
"At the systems level, emphasis is on the spatially distributed sensors and effectors that integrate the body's response to environmental challenges."
...in other words, at the systems level the nervous "system" interacts with the environment...well, "duhhhh"...and the whole section is so similarly dense that by the time you get to the end you'll probably have forgotten what the authors' originally meant to achieve in the first place...in this particular case, the authors' SIMPLY wanted the reader to understand that there are three levels of organization -- molecules, nerves, the nervous "system"...that's it...really...and I'm guessing it took the authors 600-700 words to say just that...yet their version does not present one iota of additional useful information...it's ridiculous...density does not translate into meaning...I would recommend "From Neuron to Brain" as a more readable alternative although it too could stand some judicious editing.
Customer Rating: Summary: Book Review Comment: I am an academic neuroscientist who teaches neurosciences at our university. I think this new edition is leaner but provides even more information than the previous edition of Fundamental Neuroscience. I plan to use it in one of my upcoming classes. The figures are very helpful, are clear and wonderfully drawn. The new reference section at the end of each chapter helps keep the book very much up-to-date. Overall, I recommend it highly. Customer Rating: Summary: University Sains Malaysia Neuroscience review Comment: The book has been used extensively and is our most important book on neurosciences for our 3 year Msc(Neuroscience) University Sains Malaysia course as well as our Phd programme.The phase one Advanced Master of Medicine(Neurology) and Master of Surgery(Neurosurgery) uses it as well.The latest edition is concised and translational enough for those from chemistry,biology,physics backgrounds to understand fundamental neuroscience issues. Customer Rating: Summary: The best advanced text on the market Comment: This textbook is a very detailed and very up-to-date exposition of Neuroscience, and in my view, for the more advanced student it is one of the best books out there. What it is NOT is a simple, concise introduction for people who are studying the nervous system for the first time. If you are taking an entry-level Neuroscience course you are likely to be overwhelmed by the amount of detail, and, like some of the other reviewers who gave this book a bad rap, might blame the book for the fact that you can only take in so much detail in a first sitting, and fail to see the forest for all the trees. So if you are new to Neuroscience, read something like Bear et al "Neuroscience - Exploring the Brain" first, and only once you have absorbed that, turn to this beautifully detailed book for a much closer look at the subject. The chapters on Vision by Clay Reid and the Hearing chapters by Brown in this book are quite simply and without a doubt among the best textbook chapters on these topics anywhere, (and much better than anything you will find in Kandel!)