

BSc Neuroscience (with a year in industry)
About this course
Neuroscience is the scientific study of the nervous system, encompassing the brain, spinal cord, and the complex networks of neurons that underlie everything from basic sensation to consciousness, memory, and emotion. It is one of the fastest-moving fields in modern science, bringing together biology, chemistry, physics, and psychology to understand how the brain functions in health and how it breaks down in disease. The potential to develop more effective treatments for conditions such as Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease, depression, and epilepsy makes neuroscience research among the most significant being conducted anywhere in the world. This five-year degree at the University of Dundee includes both a year abroad and a year in industry, giving you an unusually rich combination of international academic experience and professional scientific practice. You will study the structure and function of the nervous system from the cellular level upwards, learning how individual neurons communicate, how circuits are organised, and how these processes relate to behaviour and cognition. You will engage with experimental methods including imaging techniques, electrophysiology, and molecular biology, developing practical laboratory skills alongside your theoretical understanding. The year abroad extends your scientific perspective by immersing you in a different research culture and academic environment, while the industry year gives you experience of how neuroscience is applied in pharmaceutical, biotech, or clinical research settings. You will develop strong quantitative and analytical skills, rigorous habits of scientific reasoning, and the ability to communicate complex findings to both specialist and non-specialist audiences. These capabilities are in demand across a wide range of sectors. Graduates from neuroscience programmes pursue careers in academic and medical research, the pharmaceutical and biotechnology industries, clinical neuroscience settings, science communication, and public health policy. The depth of training this degree provides positions graduates well for doctoral research, medical school entry, or specialist roles in the life sciences industry. Further study at postgraduate level is a particularly common route for those who wish to develop an independent research career in neuroscience or related biomedical fields.
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