One encouraging sign was the emergence of neuroscience as a respected and beneficial academic discipline.
Now, a new perspective on Neuroscience Training for the 21st Center has been written by Huda Akil and colleagues. This perspective is recently published in the journal Neuron with free access to the full-text manuscript.
Here are my notes from reading this perspective. Readers can access the free full-text manuscript by clicking on the link in the citation below.
Two important challenges for the field
- Incorporating data and statistical skills traininng in neuroscience
- Integration of other scientific disciplines in neuroscience research (engineering, CS)
Need to improve trainee skills in high-level programming languages (i.e. MATLAB)
Enhanced communication skills in training are needed to address publication and grant-writing challenges
Improvement is needed in "enabling the process by which basic science discoveries add fundamental knowledge to the field and inform solutions for disabiling neurological and psychiatric conditions".
The above goal can be met by integrating collaborative training of basic and clinical neuroscience trainees.
Neuroscience trainees will need to be trained to meet demands of job availability
Number of neuroscience Ph.Ds graduate greatly exceed number of academic faculty slots
Federal research funding is unable to meet needs of many neuroscience graduates
However, non-academic private positions in neuroscience are expanding providing optimism for many neuroscience Ph.Ds
Key roles exist in multiple sectors to attract and train the best and brightest
- Academia
- Private sector
- Societies and Patient-Advocacy Organizations
- NIH, NSF and other funding agencies
These agencies must plan and work together to "ensure the success of this next generation of neuroscientists"
My Commentary
This is an outstanding summary of the challenges and opportunities for neuroscience education. As a physician I am particularly excited about clinical opportunities for integrating basic neuroscience training the the medical setting. I have recently been thinking about how a name change for neurology and psychiatry might aid in this evolution. Stay tuned for a provocative post on a new integrated neuroscience medicine discipline.
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