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Mark F Bear, Barry Connors, Michael Paradiso, Mark F. Bear, Barry W. Connors, Michael A. Paradiso
Edition: 2
Retail Price (not our price): $84.95
ISBN: 0781739446
ISBN-13: 9780781739443
Publication Date: 2002-03-15
Format: Hardcover
Pages: 888
Editorial Reviews (supplied by Amazon.com):
1) Product Description
Undergraduates everywhere have made Neuroscience: Exploring the Brain a top choice for learning the workings of the brain, its molecules and cells, and the systems that underlie behavior. The Second Edition includes a neuroanatomy atlas with a self-testing feature as well as new chapters on sex and the brain, motivation, and mental illness.
Customer Reviews (supplied by Amazon.com):
Average Customer Rating: 4.5 out of 5
1) Yay Neuroscience [Rating: 4 out of 5]
I am using this textbook in my neurobiology book and its very helpful. It is well written and they use examples that help you to connect to the topic. The Cd-Rom that comes with it is very helpful for learning neuroanatomy.2) Perfect Textbook [Rating: 5 out of 5]
This is a wonderful textbook, and like only a very few others I have read, is well written and interesting enough to be read as an excellent book. It is quite difficult to put down and I think most readers will find themselves reading more than is required for their class or reading it for pleasure alone. It is not a complete exhaustive reference on every topic in neuroscience, but it does not pretend to be (and I think it would lose some of its appeal to the intended audience if it did). For example, the brief mention of glial cells in chapter 2 was a little disappointing, then again, I have a textbook of close to a thousand pages on glial cells alone, but I think a little more coverage could have been given. But, there are additional resources given, which allows interested students to further explore concepts they have been introduced to in this text.There is something to be said for a text that can be read cover to cover, with little strain, and give the reader a clear overview of the field.3) Basic Overlook of Neuroscience [Rating: 5 out of 5]
This book is really good for a general understanding of neuroscience and it has good pictures. This is really a beginning undergraduate level book and can be used as supplemental material for basic concepts when a student is starting to become more advanced, but it does not go into much detail. It is well-written and consequently easy to read. If you're looking for an introduction to neuroscience this is a good book. If you're looking for a reference book for higher level neuroscience this book won't meet standards.4) Good for undergraduates [Rating: 2 out of 5]
You're probably purchasing this book because it's required for your survey course in neuroscience, and that's fine. In fact, it's pretty good for that purpose. But if you want a more rigorous treatment of the subject matter, then this book needs one or several serious supplements. It's certainly the most "lickable" neuroscience textbook out there, due to its candy-coated drawings. Pros:-Current information-Readability-Clinical focus -Profiling relevant human diseases (however largely non-rigorous)-Profiling current scientists-Presentation of some of the diagrams (colorful, do a fair job at synthesizing information)It is not so good at:-Thoroughness-More realistic images (stained sections, slice preparations, fMRI images)The two cons are a deal-breaker for me, however. For instructors I would recommend this book highly at the undergraduate level and only with a caveat to the graduate level.5) Neuroscience Brain [Rating: 5 out of 5]
It is a very good neurobiology book. All of the concepts are explained very well and in great detail.
