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neurobiologists

n. (plural of neurobiologist English)

Usage examples of "neurobiologists".

The fact that philosophers, modelers and neurobiologists are actually listening to one another, and that computer people have at last begun to show some respect for biological as well as artefactual brains, clearly makes their analyses an advance over the earlier ones, in which Al enthusiasts tended to run away with preconceived notions of what nerve cells did, and soon cut off all meaningful contact with the biological phenomena which the neurobiologists were studying.

But they have also attracted a surge of enthusiasm amongst neurobiologists, many of whom believe that here at last is a model which comes close to what brains - or at least parts of brains -might actually be like.

Relationships between neurochemists and molecular biologists - even molecular neurobiologists - remain somewhat strained.

I can see my own moves, from chemistry to biochemistry, from bio- to neurochemistry, as a forerunner to the arrival of the new generations of neurobiologists and neuroscientists.

Ignorant of the past, this new group - molecular neurobiologists, no less - began to establish their own standards of what was interesting and relevant.

Quite apart from the sort of memory that neurobiologists, psychologists and even novelists talk about and with which I am concerned, mathematics and physics, chemistry, molecular biology, genetics, immunology and evolutionary biology, not to mention computer science, all use the term.

She set up her reductionist stall, arguing for the ultimate collapse of psychology into neuroanatomy, perhaps expecting an easy ride from a group of neurobiologists, and found to her surprise that it was strongly opposed by most present - especially the neuroanatomists!

I would argue that, for neurobiologists concerned with learning and memory, the legacy of this period of experimental psychology, always excluding Hebb, is not its theoretical constructs, its painstakingly accumulated phenomenology, the minutiae of schedules of reinforcement or of conditioning chains.

Nonetheless, might neurobiologists in general, and memory researchers in particular, not gain something by concentrating on a limited number of model systems that everyone could agree on?

Most neurobiologists believe that the neurons are the active elements in brain function, although there is evidence that some specific memories and other cognitive functions may be contained in particular molecules in the brain, such as RNA or small proteins.