Overview
Students and faculty in the USC Neuroscience Graduate Program study questions spanning the entire spectrum of modern neuroscience research. Key questions include:
- how do molecules work together in time and space to build functioning nerve cells?
- how do individual neurons and their interconnections lead to the emergent properties of neural circuits?
- how do the information processing functions of neural circuits lead to complex behaviors, memories, emotions, and thought?
Departing from the traditional focus on individual disciplines, USC Neuroscience is characterized by collaborative interactions between faculty and students working at many different levels of analysis, including research on cell-molecular neurobiology, systems-level analysis of neural circuits, neural engineering, and cognitive and computational neuroscience.
When combined with a varied curriculum, weekly seminars, an annual graduate student symposium, and an extremely active neuroscience graduate student forum, the USC Neuroscience Graduate Program provides an excellent, well-rounded and nurturing training experience designed to prepare students for a successful career in interdisciplinary neuroscience research.
News
- Synaptic Metaplasticity
January 4, 2008
Dr. Tansu Celikel, at the University of Southern California, and Dr. Alison Barth, at Carnegie Mellon University, have published a study that has implications for how synaptic plasticity in vivo is regulated following its initial induction. For the full description, see "More News".
Upcoming Events
Stanford University
Tuesday 09/09/2008: 12:30 PM
Amgen
Tuesday 09/23/2008: 12:30 PM





