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Neurosciences: À la découverte du cerveau

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La obra "Neurociencia. La exploracion del cerebro" se ha convertido ya en un modelo para la creacion de cursos de introduccion a los distintos aspectos de la neurociencia y es, sin duda, especialmente util y adecuada para los estudiantes y el profesorado universitario. Frente a otras obras que presuponen que el lector posee amplios conocimientos de biologia, quimica y fisica, este texto consigue, en su 3.a edicion, el equilibrio perfecto, ya que facilita al alumno el aprendizaje y la comprension de los principios neurobiologicos mas complejos y lo hace con un estilo claro y agradable, y sin renunciar a estimular el pensamiento critico. Entre los principales objetivos de esta nueva edicion esta el de incorporar las investigaciones y hallazgos de los ultimos 5 anos, entre los que cabe destacar el avance en la secuenciacion del genoma humano. Se han anadido nuevos cuadros con informacion adicional para aquellos que quieran saber mas e ir mas alla y para que famosos neurocientificos cuenten la historia de sus investigaciones y el camino que les llevo a desvelar lo que ahora se sabe (Asi se descubrio...). El capitulo 7 incluye una guia ilustrada de neuroanatomia humana que pretende servir a los estudiantes para evaluar sus conocimientos en esta area. Finalmente, todos los capitulos incluyen ilustraciones a todo color, preguntas de revision, bibliografia reciente recomendada y una serie de palabras clave que aparecen destacadas en negrita en el texto y se definen en el glosario que hay al final.

881 pages, Paperback

First published April 1, 1995

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3910 people want to read

About the author

Mark F. Bear

18 books17 followers

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5 stars
645 (49%)
4 stars
445 (34%)
3 stars
154 (11%)
2 stars
45 (3%)
1 star
14 (1%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 55 reviews
Profile Image for Mohamed Tashkandi.
4 reviews1 follower
December 14, 2017
This book is a masterpiece for students beginning with neuroscience. Its way of simplifying complex concepts in a digestible writing without losing its powerful context is entirely captivating. It also makes it really entertaining in how it links basic science with the clinical aspect by tracking it down from discovery to practice.

Even though the first 6 chapters may seem familiar and’ve been already covered in physiology courses, it has its own taste and beauty and makes reading it feel like the first time.

For anyone who has interest in neuroscience, this book is the ideal way to start with. It’s fairly comprehensive in its topics. However, I don’t recommend it for postgraduate studies because it, to a limited extent, lacks some basic and crucial details.

Overall, the book is completely amazing and I just can’t understand how could this book be ever rated by 1 or 2 stars!

There’s a newer edition by the way.
1 review3 followers
September 3, 2014
Great structure and visuals. Would be great to get a more updated edition much has changed since then.
Profile Image for Liesbeth Godefroid.
2 reviews
December 13, 2022
I LOVE BEAR!!!!!! Felt so connected with this book, like someone close to me was explaining it all and i was eating it up
Profile Image for andy.
44 reviews6 followers
January 29, 2025
really good at explaining the concepts and i loooove the analogies they really help
Profile Image for Liam O'Leary.
553 reviews145 followers
December 6, 2016
I think this is the definitive textbook for laypeople or human science students (psychology) to begin seriously studying neuroscience. For systems neuroscience students, I'd advise Larry Squire's Fundamental Neuroscience for Systems Neuroscience over this, as it has more chapters dedicated to functions of the nervous system (sleep, pain etc.)

This book lacks fine detail, especially with respect to electrophysiology, computational approaches and molecular neuroscience. It is better for learning about behavioural experiments, gross neuroanatomy (regions not cell types) and fancy diagrams. That said, it is very hyped in American undergraduate neuroscience courses because I think in general neuroscience education in the USA and Canada is less focused on original research and deals more with fundamental textbook concepts than European courses ;)
Profile Image for Misti Atkins .
56 reviews
May 13, 2019
I entered a Doctorate level Advanced Neuroscience class in 2013 without any previous history in Biology (beyond 1 semester of 7th grade Bio and high school Marine Biology -- oy!). Needless to say, I was in over my head and had insane amounts of catching up to do once the first week of panic attacks dwindled. :) This book brought me up to speed and kept me reasonably current with the class through clear, straightforward speech and excellent scaffolding. I barely grazed by with a B, but given the lack of history, I was elated.
35 reviews
September 12, 2022
technically finished - read part 1 and 2 out of 4, but these are the only parts of the textbook I needed to read prior to starting the neurobiology module at university for michaelmas term.
Will return to parts 2 and 3 in the latter half of the academic year -> marking the book as unread again
11 reviews
August 8, 2024
This is a great introductory textbook for anyone who wants to learn more about neuroscience. I have always been fascinated by the brain and what it can do. Because of this, I have read several books on the subject, but most of them focused on specific parts or functions of the brain. This book, however, encompasses all aspects of brain functionality in one place.

You will first learn about neurons and their parts, which are a special type of cell that serves as the foundational building block of the nervous system. Next, you'll explore action potentials and how neurons communicate with each other—a part of the book I found to be the most fascinating. There is so much to learn in this chapter, including topics like neurotransmitters, receptor gates, equilibrium potentials, and many more.

As you continue reading, you'll also learn about the senses, the specific parts of the brain that receive sensory inputs, how the brain controls movement, our behaviors and motivations, and how we learn and form memories. There is probably no part of our existence that is not influenced by processes in the brain. However, we are only at the beginning of our journey to fully understand its functionality. One day, perhaps, we will solve the greatest mystery of all: consciousness.
Profile Image for Elijah Shervey.
15 reviews1 follower
January 12, 2019
A fantastic exciting length cover or many fundamental Neuroscience topics. Although I hadn't thoroughly read through other textbooks for a fair comparison, I found the short stories and 'paths to discovery' to be exciting and inspiring, and they were sprinkled all throughout the textbook. That's something you don't see too often in academic textbooks. This textbook has helped me in a major decision to shift my career towards Neuroscience research.

Although, I can point out some issues that may have been fixed in the 4th edition, as I have read the 3rd edition. In the brain vasculature and mid-brain coronal/transverse section drawings, there is some confusing imagery that doesn't seem to match with its orthographic cross-section. Admittedly this would be very difficult to draw correctly, but then again, real anatomical dimorphism is less consistent than this, that's a valid excuse.
Profile Image for Thisismarysaa.
9 reviews
November 24, 2024
This book is fantastic.
If you are majoring in neuroscience or want to switch your major to it, you must be advised on all the heavy cellular and molecular biology, biochemistry, anatomy and physiology you must learn.
Now if you're a graduate student, it is hard to browse through the long list of books you're "encouraged" to learn, i recommend this book for those who come from a different background and didn't study science for their undergrad because it covers most of the things you must learn to build your background in neuroscience.
I think by reading this you won't need all the refrences in bio and biochemistry. ( you will need youtube and chatgpt to break the concepts in it for you but you won't need extra refrences)
Dont be discouraged by how big it is! Once you break it down it's really not as intimidating.
Profile Image for Eric.
38 reviews5 followers
March 1, 2018
It's a really useful introduction to topics in neuroscience. I felt the chapters on mental illness and affective neuroscience in general were frustratingly short but I suppose that's because I have an unusual fascination with those topics. I recommend this for anyone who wants to see the very basic connections between neuronal function and behavior. It's an easy read. It took me about 3 months and I was in the middle of moving to a new continent for half a month. So if you're motivated you could do it quicker.
45 reviews1 follower
August 17, 2025
A pretty good introduction to many different topics in neuroscience. It is friendly to read and well-explained. There are a couple strange sections of the book that I found strange (such as a reductive diatribe on the subject of animal rights and a short discussion about the syncing of menstrual cycles), but overall, the book is well-organized, and I found the boxes written by neuroscience experts describing how their process of discovery to be very engaging.
Profile Image for ✿ ~Yessenia~♥︎.
184 reviews
December 22, 2017
Love Neuroscience and this textbook was interesting to read but I think it needed more helpful summary of the end of the chapters or quizzes. Otherwise the book was both a good textbook and an interesting helpful book to pass my neuroscience class. It's one of the few textbooks I actually bought to own and plan to keep.
Profile Image for lliah.
68 reviews19 followers
June 24, 2019
Used this for both my neural systems I and neural systems II course! It’s very clear and definitely a good reference book and starting point. At times it could be dense, but I did really enjoy this book for the most part. My courses in particular were mostly lecture based and had topics not mentioned in the book at all which was sometimes frustrating, but nothing a quick search can’t fix.
Profile Image for Claudio.
38 reviews2 followers
May 27, 2020
Highly detailed introduction to neuroscience, providing a comprehensive explanation of the core molecular, cellular and functional areas of the brain. It's not an easy book to read for a novice in the field but surely provides insights on the wonders of our brain and could be useful as a foundation for further studies in neuroscience, psycology and human behavior.
Profile Image for Sudhir Nallagangu.
3 reviews
August 4, 2019
Great book for even introductory readers like me who is trying to understand what goes on between ears. I am blown away by clear articulation pictures and explanation. Thanks for opening the eorld of neuroscience

Sudhir
Profile Image for Idir Yacine.
53 reviews2 followers
December 18, 2021
Great book still not what I was expecting/hoping for .
It's more of an academic alternative rather than a real-life hands on usage . A better analogy would be comparing it to abstract mathematcis and discrete mathematics .
1 review
Currently reading
April 16, 2025
Update : currently at page 51, skipped a few pages but that's fine .. looking for scientific insights and more on what happens inside the brain; hopefully I'll be able to find the insights im seeking within this book.
Profile Image for Miguel V.
19 reviews1 follower
March 25, 2019
Great book of neuroscience, excellent to start studying the brain
Profile Image for BVC.
189 reviews15 followers
October 24, 2020
Preferisco il Kandel, in linea generale. Entrambi ottimi per un primo accesso, ma approfondito, allo studio del sistema nervoso umano.
1 review
November 11, 2020
Extremely good entry level book on Neuroscience, covers the basics and is great to read and then go into more specialised neuro-disciplines and literature.
Profile Image for lex.
68 reviews4 followers
February 1, 2025
Legit explained nothing to me, but that’s probably because my teachers lectures did not follow the book at all
Profile Image for Ivo Onofre.
10 reviews
March 21, 2025
Nice book, nice adventure into the neuronal jungle that we are, grateful for the knowledge acquired!
Displaying 1 - 30 of 55 reviews

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