Neuroscience
www.vetmed.wsu.edu/depts-vcapp/graduate
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Degree offered
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M.S., Ph.D. in Neuroscience or
Veterinary Science
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Faculty working with students
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27
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Students
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27
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Students receiving assistantships or
scholarships:
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100%
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Priority deadline
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Fall - December 31
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Test required
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GRE; TOEFL or IELTS
(international students only)
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Admission Requirements
- Applicants for admission to the
neuroscience program must have a minimum grade
point average of 3.0 (A=4.0), either on the
basis of the last 60 graded semester or 90
graded quarter hours of undergraduate study, or
on the basic science portion (first 60 credit
hours) of a professional curriculum.
- Applicants generally will be expected to
have completed courses in organic chemistry,
calculus, physics, and a minimum of three
courses in different areas of the biological
sciences.
- Applicants are advised to have a basic
statistics course prior to entering the
neuroscience or veterinary science programs.
- Deficiencies in any of these areas must be
cleared during the period of graduate study
before the preliminary exam.
Program Description
Innovation by WSU scientists advances the
world’s understanding of how nerve cells
in the brain produce our feelings and behaviors
and how disturbances in the delicate
organization of the brain lead to poor health.
These neuroscientists seek answers to questions
that touch on every aspect of life, including
feeling, eating, sleeping, remembering,
sensing, and maintaining health. The
brain’s intricate web of billions of
cells is flexibly inter-linked. This plasticity
allows connections to be changed in response to
the environment; in some brain areas fifty
percent of the connections change daily. This
complex dynamic network generates emotion,
motivation, sleep, and memory. How these parts
of our selves emerge from the flexible
interactions among brain areas is one of the
most intriguing, fundamental questions of life.
Better understanding of this complexity is the
key to reducing the societal impact of obesity,
memory loss, mental illness, and drug
addiction, and to enhancing performance and
health.
- The M.S. program is designed to provide
broad training in the specific aspects of
neuroscience and related disciplines to prepare
students for careers in teaching, research, and
service.
- The objectives for the Ph.D. level training
are to prepare the candidate for a career as an
independent investigator (i.e., can compete for
NIH, NSF and private foundation grants as the
principal investigator).
Department
of Veterinary and Comparative Anatomy,
Pharmacology, and Physiology
(VCAPP)
Contact Information Steve
Simasko, Ph.D.
McCoy Hall 110
PO Box 646520
Pullman, WA 99164-6520
Telephone: 509-335-7675
Fax: 509-335-4650
E-mail: grad.neuro@wsu.edu
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