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Medical Neuroscience

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Medical Neuroscience

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Gain insight into a topic and learn the fundamentals.
4.9

3,121 reviews

Advanced level
Designed for those already in the industry
Flexible schedule
7 weeks at 10 hours a week
Learn at your own pace

Gain insight into a topic and learn the fundamentals.
4.9

3,121 reviews

Advanced level
Designed for those already in the industry
Flexible schedule
7 weeks at 10 hours a week
Learn at your own pace

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Assessments

33 assignments

Taught in English
98%
Most learners liked this course

There are 18 modules in this course

Medical Neuroscience explores the functional organization and neurophysiology of the human central nervous system, while providing a neurobiological framework for understanding human behavior. In this course, you will discover the organization of the neural systems in the brain and spinal cord that mediate sensation, motivate bodily action, and integrate sensorimotor signals with memory, emotion and related faculties of cognition. The overall goal of this course is to provide the foundation for understanding the impairments of sensation, action and cognition that accompany injury, disease or dysfunction in the central nervous system. The course will build upon knowledge acquired through prior studies of cell and molecular biology, general physiology and human anatomy, as we focus primarily on the central nervous system.

This online course is designed to include all of the core concepts in neurophysiology and clinical neuroanatomy that would be presented in most first-year neuroscience courses in schools of medicine. However, there are some topics (e.g., biological psychiatry) and several learning experiences (e.g., hands-on brain dissection) that we provide in the corresponding course offered in the Duke University School of Medicine on campus that we are not attempting to reproduce in Medical Neuroscience online. Nevertheless, our aim is to faithfully present in scope and rigor a medical school caliber course experience. This course comprises six units of content organized into 12 weeks, with an additional week for a comprehensive final exam: - Unit 1 Neuroanatomy (weeks 1-2). This unit covers the surface anatomy of the human brain, its internal structure, and the overall organization of sensory and motor systems in the brainstem and spinal cord. - Unit 2 Neural signaling (weeks 3-4). This unit addresses the fundamental mechanisms of neuronal excitability, signal generation and propagation, synaptic transmission, post synaptic mechanisms of signal integration, and neural plasticity. - Unit 3 Sensory systems (weeks 5-7). Here, you will learn the overall organization and function of the sensory systems that contribute to our sense of self relative to the world around us: somatic sensory systems, proprioception, vision, audition, and balance senses. - Unit 4 Motor systems (weeks 8-9). In this unit, we will examine the organization and function of the brain and spinal mechanisms that govern bodily movement. - Unit 5 Brain Development (week 10). Next, we turn our attention to the neurobiological mechanisms for building the nervous system in embryonic development and in early postnatal life; we will also consider how the brain changes across the lifespan. - Unit 6 Cognition (weeks 11-12). The course concludes with a survey of the association systems of the cerebral hemispheres, with an emphasis on cortical networks that integrate perception, memory and emotion in organizing behavior and planning for the future; we will also consider brain systems for maintaining homeostasis and regulating brain state.

Let's get started in Medical Neuroscience! Each module in Medical Neuroscience will begin with a brief description like this that provides you with an overview of the module. In this first module, you will get to know something about Prof. White and his career in neuroscience; you will understand the scope of Medical Neuroscience, its learning resources, your responsibilities for maximizing your benefit in this course, and you will learn Prof. White's tips on how best to study and learn. At the end of this module, please take the ungraded preliminary quiz, "Are you ready for Medical Neuroscience", to self-assess your background knowledge. Your score on this quiz will not count toward your overall score in this course. However, you should be able to pass this quiz (score 70% or better) if you are ready for the academic challenge of this course. Students who are likely to achieve their goals in Medical Neuroscience should be able to successfully answer nearly all of the quiz questions on their first attempt and feel comfortable with assessment questions at this level of knowledge.

What's included

5 videos3 readings1 assignment

5 videosTotal 75 minutes
  • Professor White's Career in Neuroscience14 minutes
  • The Scope of Medical Neuroscience11 minutes
  • Learning resources for Medical Neuroscience33 minutes
  • Your Part!13 minutes
  • "Neur-run" with Professor White4 minutes
3 readingsTotal 30 minutes
  • Learning Objectives10 minutes
  • Your Mentor Team10 minutes
  • Report a problem with the course 10 minutes
1 assignmentTotal 30 minutes
  • Preliminary Quiz: Are you ready for Medical Neuroscience?30 minutes

Your introduction to Medical Neuroscience continues as you experience in this module a brief introduction to the human brain, its component cells, and some basic anatomical conventions for finding your way around the human central nervous system.

What's included

4 videos1 reading1 assignment

4 videosTotal 79 minutes
  • Professor White's Favorite Places in the Human Brain20 minutes
  • Functional Microanatomy of Neurons31 minutes
  • Non-Neural Cells of the CNS21 minutes
  • Basic Orientation in the Human CNS7 minutes
1 readingTotal 10 minutes
  • Introduction, Learning Objectives and Recommended Reading10 minutes
1 assignmentTotal 30 minutes
  • Cells of the CNS and Basic Orientation30 minutes

We now begin in earnest our lessons on neuroanatomy with the surface of the human brain, including a brief run through the cranial nerves and the blood supply to the CNS. In this module, you will learn the basic subdivisions of the vertebrate nervous system; however, your focus should be on the cerebral cortex. Along the way, you will be challenged to "build a digital brain" that should help you generate and improve your mental “model” of the cerebral hemispheres of the human brain. Another great way to refine your mental model is through sketching and crafting, so please do the learning objectives that are designed to help you make visible (and tangible) your understanding of the cerebral hemispheres.

What's included

12 videos2 readings2 assignments3 discussion prompts

12 videosTotal 129 minutes
  • Lateral Surface of the Brain7 minutes
  • Medial Surface of the Brain6 minutes
  • Finding the Central Sulcus7 minutes
  • Ventral Surface of the Brain8 minutes
  • Building a Digital Brain (Fingers to Gyri)11 minutes
  • Surface Anatomy of the Brainstem5 minutes
  • Blood Supply to the Brain15 minutes
  • Overview of the Cranial Nerves20 minutes
  • Overview of the Spinal Nerves9 minutes
  • Localizing the Cranial Nerves14 minutes
  • Cranial Nerve Function, part 117 minutes
  • Cranial Nerve Function, part 211 minutes
2 readingsTotal 20 minutes
  • Learning Objectives / Recommended Readings10 minutes
  • Learning Objectives / Recommended Readings10 minutes
2 assignmentsTotal 60 minutes
  • Cerebral Cortex, Brainstem, and Blood Supply30 minutes
  • Cranial and Spinal Nerves30 minutes
3 discussion promptsTotal 30 minutes
  • Let's Discuss: Is Bigger Better?10 minutes
  • Visualize Your Knowledge: Surface Features of the Cerebral Hemispheres10 minutes
  • Let's #GetNeuro: Doing Medical Neuroscience10 minutes

What's included

12 videos2 readings2 assignments1 discussion prompt

12 videosTotal 160 minutes
  • Internal Anatomy of the Brainstem24 minutes
  • Cranial Nerve Nuclei, part 112 minutes
  • Cranial Nerve Nuclei, part 219 minutes
  • Cranial Nerve Nuclei, part 318 minutes
  • Cranial Nerve Nuclei, part 418 minutes
  • Internal Anatomy of the Spinal Cord - Gray and White Matter11 minutes
  • Internal Anatomy of the Spinal Cord -Longitudinal Organization11 minutes
  • Internal Anatomy of the Spinal Cord In Cross Sections7 minutes
  • Ventricles9 minutes
  • Overview of the Internal Capsule and Deep Gray Matter9 minutes
  • Localizing the Internal Capsule and Deep Gray Matter In Brain Slabs10 minutes
  • Localizing the Internal Capsule and Deep Gray Matter In Sylvius Atlases13 minutes
2 readingsTotal 20 minutes
  • Learning Objectives / Recommended Readings10 minutes
  • Learning Objectives / Recommended Readings10 minutes
2 assignmentsTotal 52 minutes
  • Brainstem and Spinal Cord22 minutes
  • Forebrain30 minutes
1 discussion promptTotal 10 minutes
  • Let's Discuss: What Makes Us Human?10 minutes

We now turn our attention from the tangible (human neuroanatomy) to the physiological as we explore the means by which neurons generate, propagate and communicate electrical signals. After exploring those structures in the human brain that are visible to the unaided eye, we must now sharpen our focus and zoom-in, as it were, to the unitary level of organization and function in the central nervous system: to the level of individual neurons and their component parts that are crucial for neural signaling.

What's included

9 videos1 reading1 assignment3 discussion prompts

9 videosTotal 142 minutes
  • Overview of Neuronal Signaling15 minutes
  • Ionic Basis of the Resting Membrane Potential, part 114 minutes
  • Ionic Basis of the Resting Membrane Potential, part 216 minutes
  • Ionic Basis of the Action Potential, part 119 minutes
  • Ionic Basis of the Action Potential, part 213 minutes
  • Ionic Basis of the Action Potential, part 316 minutes
  • Molecular Mechanisms of Action Potential Generation, part 121 minutes
  • Molecular Mechanisms of Action Potential Generation, part 210 minutes
  • Propagation of Action Potentials21 minutes
1 readingTotal 10 minutes
  • Learning Objectives / Recommended Readings10 minutes
1 assignmentTotal 30 minutes
  • Generating and Propagating Electrical Signals30 minutes
3 discussion promptsTotal 30 minutes
  • Let's #GetNeuro: Neuroscience in Nature10 minutes
  • Let's Discuss: A Moment in Time10 minutes
  • Clinical Case Studies: An Older Woman with a Transient Ischemic Attack10 minutes

Let’s continue our studies of neural signaling by learning about what happens at synaptic junctions, where the terminal ending of one neuron meets a complementary process of another excitable cell.

What's included

13 videos2 readings2 assignments1 discussion prompt

13 videosTotal 226 minutes
  • Synaptic Transmission, part 121 minutes
  • Synaptic Transmission, part 215 minutes
  • Neurotransmitters, part 116 minutes
  • Neurotransmitters, part 222 minutes
  • Ionotropic Neurotransmitters Receptors, part 118 minutes
  • Ionotropic Neurotransmitters Receptors, part 212 minutes
  • Metabotropic Neurotransmitters Receptors and Postsynaptic Mechanisms12 minutes
  • Synaptic Integration25 minutes
  • Long-Term Potentiation and Depression, part 123 minutes
  • Long-Term Potentiation and Depression, part 217 minutes
  • Long-Term Potentiation and Depression, part 314 minutes
  • Spike-Timing Dependent synaptic Plasticity19 minutes
  • Hebb's Postulate12 minutes
2 readingsTotal 20 minutes
  • Learning Objectives / Recommended Readings10 minutes
  • Learning Objectives / Recommended Readings10 minutes
2 assignmentsTotal 60 minutes
  • Synaptic Transmission30 minutes
  • Synaptic Plasticity30 minutes
1 discussion promptTotal 10 minutes
  • Lets' Discuss: Use it or Lose It?10 minutes

We have reached a significant juncture in Medical Neuroscience as we turn our attention to the organization and function of the sensory systems. We will begin our studies with the somatic sensory systems, which includes subsystems for mechanical sensation and pain/temperature sensation. But before we get there, it is worth considering first some organizing principles that will set the stage for studies of somatic sensation and all the other sensory systems of the body.

What's included

16 videos2 readings2 assignments2 discussion prompts

16 videosTotal 257 minutes
  • The Thalamus16 minutes
  • Overview and Origins of Cortical Circuits, part 116 minutes
  • Overview and Origins of Cortical Circuits, part 212 minutes
  • General Principles of Sensory Systems, part 117 minutes
  • General Principles of Sensory Systems, part 219 minutes
  • Mechanosensation, part 117 minutes
  • Mechanosensation, part 215 minutes
  • Mechanosensation, part 317 minutes
  • Mechanosensory Pathways, part 115 minutes
  • Mechanosensory Pathways, part 211 minutes
  • Mechanosensory Pathways, part 318 minutes
  • Pain Systems, part 120 minutes
  • Pain Systems, part 215 minutes
  • Pain Systems, part 313 minutes
  • Pain and Temperature Pathways, part 119 minutes
  • Pain and Temperature Pathways, part 217 minutes
2 readingsTotal 20 minutes
  • Learning Objectives / Recommended Readings10 minutes
  • Learning Objectives / Recommended Readings10 minutes
2 assignmentsTotal 60 minutes
  • Organizing Principles30 minutes
  • Somatic Sensation30 minutes
2 discussion promptsTotal 20 minutes
  • Lets' Discuss: How Many Senses?10 minutes
  • Clinical Case Studies: Frequent Finger Burns10 minutes

This module will provide lessons that are designed to help you understand the basic mechanisms by which light is transduced into electrical signals that are then used to construct visual perceptions in the brain. Your studies of the visual system will benefit you at this point in the course, but also in later studies when we use the visual system as a model for understanding general principles of developmental plasticity. Lastly, it is worth noting how much of the forebrain contains elements of the visual pathways. Thus, injuries and disease in widespread regions of the brain may have a clinically important impact on visual function. All the more reason to learn these lessons well as you progress in Medical Neuroscience.

What's included

12 videos2 readings2 assignments

12 videosTotal 161 minutes
  • Basic Structure of the Eye and Retina16 minutes
  • Photoreceptors and Phototransduction, part 114 minutes
  • Photoreceptors and Phototransduction, part 211 minutes
  • Ganglion Cell Receptive fields, part 113 minutes
  • Ganglion Cell Receptive fields, part 26 minutes
  • Central Visual Processing, part 114 minutes
  • Central Visual Processing, part 215 minutes
  • Central Visual Processing, part 320 minutes
  • Central Visual Pathways, part 112 minutes
  • Central Visual Pathways, part 214 minutes
  • Visual Field Deficits15 minutes
  • Pupillary Light Reflex9 minutes
2 readingsTotal 20 minutes
  • Learning Objectives / Recommended Readings10 minutes
  • Learning Objectives / Recommended Readings10 minutes
2 assignmentsTotal 60 minutes
  • The Eye30 minutes
  • Central Visual Processing30 minutes

Our survey of the sensory systems continues as we now turn our attention to the auditory system, the vestibular system, and the chemical sensory systems. As you study this content, notice the similarities and the differences that pertain to the general mechanisms of sensory transduction and the broad organization of the central pathways in each of these sensory systems. In particular, note the similarity in transduction mechanisms for audition and vestibular sensation; and note the “logic” of sensory coding in the chemical sensory systems.

What's included

22 videos3 readings3 assignments1 discussion prompt

22 videosTotal 272 minutes
  • Peripheral Auditory Mechanisms, part 119 minutes
  • Peripheral Auditory Mechanisms, part 214 minutes
  • Peripheral Auditory Mechanisms, part 310 minutes
  • Central Auditory Processing, part 114 minutes
  • Central Auditory Processing, part 211 minutes
  • Central Auditory Processing, part 315 minutes
  • Peripheral Vestibular Mechanisms, part 116 minutes
  • Peripheral Vestibular Mechanisms, part 215 minutes
  • Peripheral Vestibular Mechanisms, part 312 minutes
  • Central Vestibular Processing, part19 minutes
  • Central Vestibular Processing, part 213 minutes
  • Central Vestibular Processing, part 312 minutes
  • Central Vestibular Processing, part 44 minutes
  • Overview of the Chemical Senses8 minutes
  • Olfaction, part 113 minutes
  • Olfaction, part 29 minutes
  • Olfaction, part 314 minutes
  • Olfaction, part 418 minutes
  • Gustation, part112 minutes
  • Gustation, part 214 minutes
  • Gustation, part 39 minutes
  • Trigeminal Chemoreception10 minutes
3 readingsTotal 30 minutes
  • Learning Objectives / Recommended Readings10 minutes
  • Learning Objectives / Recommended Readings10 minutes
  • Learning Objectives / Recommended Readings10 minutes
3 assignmentsTotal 90 minutes
  • Audition30 minutes
  • Vestibular Sensation30 minutes
  • Chemical Senses30 minutes
1 discussion promptTotal 10 minutes
  • Lets' Discuss: Synesthesia10 minutes

We come now to another pivot in Medical Neuroscience where our focus shifts from sensation to action. Or to borrow a phrase made famous by C.S. Sherrington more than a century ago (the title of his classic text), we will now consider the “integrative action of the nervous system”. We will do so in this module by learning the basic mechanisms by which neural circuits in the brain and spinal cord motivate bodily movement.

What's included

18 videos2 readings2 assignments4 discussion prompts

18 videosTotal 252 minutes
  • Overview of the Motor System14 minutes
  • Overview of Motor Units20 minutes
  • Muscle Spindles and Myotatic Reflexes, part 118 minutes
  • Muscle Spindles and Myotatic Reflexes, part 211 minutes
  • Golgi Tendon Organs7 minutes
  • Spindles Versus GTOs, and Withdrawal Reflexes9 minutes
  • Central Pattern Generation9 minutes
  • Lower Motor Syndrome6 minutes
  • Primary Motor Cortex, part 119 minutes
  • Primary Motor Cortex, part 215 minutes
  • Primary Motor Cortex, part 312 minutes
  • Premotor Cortex14 minutes
  • Brainstem Upper Motor Neurons16 minutes
  • Emotional Motor System15 minutes
  • Control of Facial Expressions23 minutes
  • Upper Motor Neuron Syndrome9 minutes
  • Corticospinal and Corticobulbar Pathways, part 119 minutes
  • Corticospinal and Corticobulbar Pathways, part 215 minutes
2 readingsTotal 20 minutes
  • Learning Objectives / Recommended Readings10 minutes
  • Learning Objectives / Recommended Readings10 minutes
2 assignmentsTotal 60 minutes
  • Lower Motor Neuronal Control of Movement30 minutes
  • Upper Motor Neuronal Control of Movement30 minutes
4 discussion promptsTotal 40 minutes
  • Lets' Discuss: Muscle Memory10 minutes
  • Clinical Case Studies: NeuroLogical Case No. 1 (University of Utah) - The Upset Office Manager10 minutes
  • Lets' Discuss: Decussations10 minutes
  • Clinical Case Studies: Right Arm and Leg Paralysis, with Tongue Weakness10 minutes

At this juncture in our exploration of motor control, let’s focus on one of the best studied paradigms for understanding the neural control of movement: the eye movement system.

What's included

6 videos1 reading1 assignment

6 videosTotal 60 minutes
  • Muscles and Nerves10 minutes
  • Overview of Eye Movements9 minutes
  • Conjugate Eye Movements10 minutes
  • Disconjugate Eye Movements and Eye Movement Physiology11 minutes
  • Neural Control of Saccades, part 111 minutes
  • Neural Control of Saccades, part 211 minutes
1 readingTotal 10 minutes
  • Learning Objectives / Recommended Readings10 minutes
1 assignmentTotal 30 minutes
  • Eye Movements30 minutes

Next, we will consider two major brain systems that modulate the output of upper motor neuronal circuits: the basal ganglia and the cerebellum. Take note: the output of these systems is NOT directed at lower motor circuits directly; rather, their output engages the motor thalamus and brainstem upper motor neuronal circuits. Thus, the actions of the basal ganglia and cerebellum are to modulate, rather than command, the activities of upper motor neurons. As you study the lessons in this module, appreciate how the basal ganglia and cerebellum function in a somewhat complementary fashion to modulate the initiation and coordination of movement, respectively.

What's included

11 videos2 readings2 assignments2 discussion prompts

11 videosTotal 154 minutes
  • Circuitry of the Basal Ganglia, part 118 minutes
  • Circuitry of the Basal Ganglia, part 214 minutes
  • Circuitry of the Basal Ganglia, part 314 minutes
  • Function of Basal Ganglia Circuitry17 minutes
  • Basal Ganglia Function In Normal and Abnormal Movement20 minutes
  • Overview of the Cerebellum, part 111 minutes
  • Overview of the Cerebellum, part 212 minutes
  • Cerebellar Circuits, part 112 minutes
  • Cerebellar Circuits, part 215 minutes
  • Cerebellar Circuits, part 36 minutes
  • Cerebellar Function In Normal and Abnormal Movement15 minutes
2 readingsTotal 20 minutes
  • Learning Objectives / Recommended Readings10 minutes
  • Learning Objectives / Recommended Readings10 minutes
2 assignmentsTotal 60 minutes
  • Modulation of Movement by the Basal Ganglia30 minutes
  • Modulation of Movement by the Cerebellum30 minutes
2 discussion promptsTotal 20 minutes
  • Lets' Discuss: Is Bigger Better?10 minutes
  • Clinical Case Studies: NeuroLogical Case No. 3 (University of Utah) - Woman with Unsteadiness10 minutes

We conclude our survey of movement and motor control by considering the visceral motor system, perhaps better known as the autonomic nervous system. As you study this lesson, consider how the disparate physiology of the viscera has impact not only on the internal state of the body, but also on implicit processing in the forebrain. We will return to this matter when we consider the neurobiology of emotions near the conclusion of Medical Neuroscience

What's included

8 videos1 reading1 assignment1 discussion prompt

8 videosTotal 107 minutes
  • Functional and Anatomical Divisions of the Visceral Motor System, part 111 minutes
  • Functional and Anatomical Divisions of the Visceral Motor System, part 214 minutes
  • Functional and Anatomical Divisions of the Visceral Motor System, part 311 minutes
  • Central Integration of Visceral Sensory and Motor Signals, part 114 minutes
  • Central Integration of Visceral Sensory and Motor Signals, part 28 minutes
  • Hypothalamus, part 114 minutes
  • Hypothalamus, part 217 minutes
  • Micturition19 minutes
1 readingTotal 10 minutes
  • Learning Objectives / Recommended Readings10 minutes
1 assignmentTotal 30 minutes
  • Visceral Motor System30 minutes
1 discussion promptTotal 10 minutes
  • Clinical Case Studies: Awoke to Ptosis, Hoarseness, and Difficulty Swallowing10 minutes

This module represents another turning point in Medical Neuroscience. Now that we have surveyed human neuroanatomy and our sensory and motor systems, we are ready to take a step back and consider how this magnificent central nervous system came to be the way that it is. We will also learn how the brain re-wires itself across the lifespan as genetic specification, experience-dependent plasticity and self-organization continue to interact, re-shaping the structure and function of neural circuits throughout the central nervous system.

What's included

23 videos3 readings3 assignments1 discussion prompt

23 videosTotal 295 minutes
  • Embryological Subdivisions of the Human CNS9 minutes
  • Major Forces In Early Brain Development13 minutes
  • Neurulation11 minutes
  • Formation of the Early CNS13 minutes
  • Inductive Signaling In CNS Formation15 minutes
  • Proliferation and Migration, part 117 minutes
  • Proliferation and Migration, part 211 minutes
  • Growth Cones12 minutes
  • Molecular Signals for Axon Guidance, part 113 minutes
  • Molecular Signals for Axon Guidance, part 213 minutes
  • Neurotrophins13 minutes
  • Neurotrophin Receptors and Synapse Formation12 minutes
  • Lessons from Studies of Ocular Dominance Columns, part 121 minutes
  • Lessons from Studies of Ocular Dominance Columns, part 211 minutes
  • Lessons from Studies of Orientation and Direction Preference, part 115 minutes
  • Lessons from Studies of Orientation and Direction Preference, part 211 minutes
  • Lessons from Studies of Orientation and Direction Preference, part 316 minutes
  • Neurotrophins In Developmental Plasticity13 minutes
  • Brain Development Across the Lifespan, part 112 minutes
  • Brain Development Across the Lifespan, part 27 minutes
  • Functional Plasticity In Cortical Maps17 minutes
  • Repair and Regeneration, part 114 minutes
  • Repair and Regeneration, part 26 minutes
3 readingsTotal 30 minutes
  • Learning Objectives / Recommended Readings10 minutes
  • Learning Objectives / Recommended Readings10 minutes
  • Learning Objectives / Recommended Readings10 minutes
3 assignmentsTotal 90 minutes
  • Early Brain Development30 minutes
  • Developmental Plasticity of Neural Circuits In Early Life30 minutes
  • Development, Repair and Regeneration Across the Lifespan30 minutes
1 discussion promptTotal 10 minutes
  • Clinical Case Studies: NeuroLogical Case No. 2 (University of Utah): Girl with Sudden Weakness10 minutes

It may surprise you to know that in all of our studies of the neural systems for sensation and action, we have yet to properly account for the organization and function of roughly 75% of the entire cerebral mantle. Thus, only 25% of the cerebral cortex is accounted for by the modal sensory and motor cortical areas. The majority of the human cerebral cortex is multi-modal cortex that associates signals derived from one or more modal systems. We now turn our attention to this “associational cortex” as we consider more complex aspects of brain function.

What's included

11 videos1 reading1 assignment2 discussion prompts

11 videosTotal 169 minutes
  • Overview of Cognition15 minutes
  • Overview of the Associational Cortex13 minutes
  • Parietal Associational Cortex, part 112 minutes
  • Parietal Associational Cortex, part 215 minutes
  • Temporal associational Cortex: Visual Recognition22 minutes
  • Temporal Associational Cortex: Memory, part 124 minutes
  • Temporal Associational Cortex: Memory, part 212 minutes
  • Temporal Associational Cortex: Language, part 115 minutes
  • Temporal Associational Cortex: Language, part 211 minutes
  • Frontal Associational Cortex: Working Memory15 minutes
  • Frontal Associational cortex: Exeutive Function15 minutes
1 readingTotal 10 minutes
  • Learning Objectives / Recommended Reading10 minutes
1 assignmentTotal 30 minutes
  • Associational Cortex30 minutes
2 discussion promptsTotal 20 minutes
  • Let's #GetNeuro: In Poetic Forms10 minutes
  • Lets' Discuss: Grounded Cognition10 minutes

In this concluding module of Medical Neuroscience, we will consider the neurobiology of sleep and the neurobiology of emotion, including addiction. Both topics involve explorations of complex, widely distributed systems in the forebrain and brainstem that modulate states of body and brain.

What's included

13 videos2 readings2 assignments1 discussion prompt

13 videosTotal 205 minutes
  • Overview of Sleep and Wakefulness18 minutes
  • Circadian Rhythms16 minutes
  • Brain Waves and Sleep Stages16 minutes
  • Neural Circuits That Govern Sleep and Wakefulness, part 120 minutes
  • Neural Circuits That Govern Sleep and Wakefulness, part 216 minutes
  • Sleep Disorders14 minutes
  • Amygdala and Hippocampus In the Human Brain6 minutes
  • Neurobiology of Emotion, part 116 minutes
  • Neurobiology of Emotion, part 214 minutes
  • Neurobiology of Emotion, part 320 minutes
  • Neurobiology of Emotion, part 423 minutes
  • Reward and Addiction, part 112 minutes
  • Reward and Addiction, part 214 minutes
2 readingsTotal 20 minutes
  • Learning Objectives / Recommended Readings10 minutes
  • Learning Objectives / Recommended Readings10 minutes
2 assignmentsTotal 60 minutes
  • Sleep and Wakefulness30 minutes
  • Limbic Forebrain, Emotion, and Addiction30 minutes
1 discussion promptTotal 10 minutes
  • Lets' Discuss: "Higher" Brain Function10 minutes

This module contains materials that will help you prepare for the final challenge in Medical Neuroscience: our clinical case-based, Comprehensive Final Exam.

What's included

1 video1 reading5 assignments

1 videoTotal 22 minutes
  • Preparing for the Comprehensive Final Exam22 minutes
1 readingTotal 10 minutes
  • Preparation Notes10 minutes
5 assignmentsTotal 150 minutes
  • Comprehensive Final Exam, part 1 (2 cases, 13 questions)30 minutes
  • Comprehensive Final Exam, part 2 (2 cases, 7 questions)30 minutes
  • Comprehensive Final Exam, part 3 (2 cases, 11 questions)30 minutes
  • Comprehensive Final Exam, part 4 (2 cases, 12 questions)30 minutes
  • Example Clinical Case Quiz (UNGRADED, 11 questions)30 minutes

Please allow me a few more moments of your time to express my thanks for all your efforts to make it through Medical Neuroscience, and to wish you well on all your future endeavors!

What's included

1 video1 reading

1 videoTotal 6 minutes
  • Closing Remarks from Dr. White (05:44)6 minutes
1 readingTotal 10 minutes
  • Share your learning experience10 minutes

Instructor

Instructor ratings
4.9 (821 ratings)
Duke University
1 Course409,039 learners

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Showing 3 of 3121

SA
·

Reviewed on Nov 16, 2017

I found this course extremely useful. It was exactly what I needed and expected. A structured study of the brain and the spinal chord starting at the cellular level. A perfect course!

IR
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Reviewed on Mar 26, 2019

I used this as preparation material for a module/test for my graduate degree and i found the videos to be clearer, more complete, and helpful than my actual courses. That is quite impressive.

LR
·

Reviewed on Jun 11, 2020

A truly excellent course, presented in an engaging format by Professor Len White. Many new avenues are now open for me to explore as a result of gaining this new level of knowledge.

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