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How forty years of research on thirty neurons in the stomach of a lobster has yielded valuable insights for the study of the human brain.

Neuroscientist Eve Marder has spent forty years studying thirty neurons on the stomach of a lobster. Her focus on this tiny network of cells has yielded valuable insights into the much more complex workings of the human brain; she has become a leading voice in neuroscience. In Lessons from the Lobster, Charlotte Nassim describes Marder's work and its significance accessibly and engagingly, tracing the evolution of a supremely gifted scientist's ideas.

From the lobster's digestion to human thought is very big leap indeed. Our brains selectively recruit networks from about ninety billion available neurons; the connections are extremely complex. Nevertheless, as Nassim explains, Marder's study of a microscopic knot of stomatogastric neurons in lobsters and crabs, a small network with a countable number of neurons, has laid vital f

Lessons from the Lobster Eve Marders Work in

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A Hardback by Charlotte Nassim


    View other formats and editions of Lessons from the Lobster Eve Marders Work in by Charlotte Nassim

    Publisher: MIT Press Ltd
    Publication Date: 26/06/2018
    ISBN13: 9780262037785, 978-0262037785
    ISBN10: 0262037785

    Description

    Book Synopsis
    How forty years of research on thirty neurons in the stomach of a lobster has yielded valuable insights for the study of the human brain.

    Neuroscientist Eve Marder has spent forty years studying thirty neurons on the stomach of a lobster. Her focus on this tiny network of cells has yielded valuable insights into the much more complex workings of the human brain; she has become a leading voice in neuroscience. In Lessons from the Lobster, Charlotte Nassim describes Marder's work and its significance accessibly and engagingly, tracing the evolution of a supremely gifted scientist's ideas.

    From the lobster's digestion to human thought is very big leap indeed. Our brains selectively recruit networks from about ninety billion available neurons; the connections are extremely complex. Nevertheless, as Nassim explains, Marder's study of a microscopic knot of stomatogastric neurons in lobsters and crabs, a small network with a countable number of neurons, has laid vital f

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