Schools Academic Planning and Graduate School

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A student in their final year of a Bachelor of Science program is considering additional undergraduate studies to better prepare for graduate work in theoretical and computational neuroscience. They express concern about their ability to integrate knowledge across various disciplines, despite having taken a diverse range of courses in neuroscience, pharmacology, physics, and mathematics. The student is seeking recommendations for relevant courses, textbooks, and online resources, particularly in advanced computer science and applied mathematics, to strengthen their foundational knowledge and skills for graduate studies. The discussion emphasizes the importance of building a cohesive understanding of interdisciplinary concepts in neuroscience.
CopperNerves
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Hello Everyone!

I'm currently in the final year of my Bachelor of Science, and I'm interested in pursuing graduate studies in theoretical/computational neuroscience. Unfortunately, I don't feel prepared for graduate level study/research in this discipline. Therefore, I'm contemplating taking an additional year, or two, of undergraduate studies to develop more foundational knowledge and skills. With that in mind, I could really use some outside insight into what courses I should be taking, textbooks I should be reading, or MITOCW courses I should be learning on my own.

So, to make giving advice easier, I will start by stating my current degree is unconventional. It's highly interdisciplinary and doesn't fit nicely under the umbrella of any major. However, I think a quick list of my senior-level courses will give a general idea of what I know:
Psychopharmacology & Advanced Pharmacology
Advanced Neuroscience, Neuropsychology I & II, Evolutionary Psychology, & Psychopathology
Thermodynamics, Quantum Mechanics, & Electromagnetism
Molecular Physiology I & II, Histology, & Molecular Genetics
Point-Set Topology & Analysis (Calculus I-IV)
Organic Synthesis & Drug Design

My biggest concern is that despite taking a lot of courses in a variety of disciplines, I find it incredibly difficult to integrate ideas. I'm made especially aware of this when I read articles from Frontiers in Computational Neuroscience or Neuroinformatics.

I'm thinking that it'd be to my benefit to take some advanced computer science courses, and more 'applied' mathematics. But, I'm open to suggestions.

Thank you for reading!
 
Physics news on Phys.org
What's your current BS degree in?
 
SteamKing said:
What's your current BS degree in?

I didn't major in anything.
 
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