For knowing so very few graduates, you make a strong claim about what you can do with the degree! Most people don't do something that tied to their major right out of college, the value is the degree itself and then you build up experience. Neuroscience is pretty similar to all other majors that are not specifically pre-professional. People seem to do all sorts of things with them. |
| I went to NYU in the early 2000s and most of my friends gunning for med school were neuropsyche majors. Seems to be a popular degree, if you are not going to do the chemistry or bio routes. |
Neuroscience or psychology? Please clarify. |
| + Andrew Huberman, a Stanford neuroscientist, has one of the most popular podcasts in the country. |
| The tech used to study the brain has really taken off in the last 2 decades. This tech barely existed when we were in college. |
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It's not
Not at all It's an entry major. |
| I don’t know the answer but I find the development science of neurology to be incredibly interesting. All the stuff about adhd, asd, anxiety etc — I think we have only just scratched the surface of what causes these divergences, and we are on the cusp of discoveries that will be equivalent to the discovery of anribiotics. In a hundred years people will look back and be amazed at how basic our understanding was. |
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| Huberman made it cool. |
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There has been an explosion in our understanding of the brain.
It is an exciting time to enter the field. |
| remarkable science for those unable or unmotivated to do physics |
| I am shocked by how popular neuroscience is too. It is an incredibly specialized field for an undergrad, but it is insanely popular. Neuroscience is now more popular than biology at some colleges despite biology being a much more general and widely applicable major. Neuroscience varies from school to school, but in some schools it does seem to be a "STEMMED -UP psychology. Girls especially seem to love it. |