°Ç¸ç³Ô¹Ï

skip to content

Postgraduate Study

Course closed:

Basic and Translational Neuroscience is no longer accepting new applications.

Teaching

The course offers both taught and research components including a project rotation in a laboratory of the student’s choosing from the projects offered by °Ç¸ç³Ô¹Ï Neuroscience principal investigators. The write-up for the project will be formally assessed.

Supervisors will be drawn from principal investigators listed on the . For projects in external organisations (industry-based), the student would have an additional academic University-based supervisor in addition to the industry-based supervisor. 

Students will be expected to choose three research training modules from the five to seven available. These modules vary from year to year and may be shared with other courses. 

In addition to the research project and research training modules, the students will receive more than 20 hours of lectures, seminars and workshops on the five main themes of °Ç¸ç³Ô¹Ï Neuroscience.

Students taking this degree will be members of the University’s Postgraduate School of Life Sciences (PSLS) who offer a wide variety of core skills training. Visit the on the PSLS website for more information.

One to one supervision

The programme director will be appointed as principal supervisor for all students for the duration of the master's year; project supervisors drawn from the principal investigators or senior research staff within their groups will also be assigned for the research projects. The principal supervisor, assisted by the programme coordinator, will provide individual guidance and general support and meet the students at least once a term (i.e. at least three times during the MPhil course).

The °Ç¸ç³Ô¹Ï publishes an annual which sets out the University’s expectations regarding supervision.

Seminars & classes

Interdisciplinary seminars and journal clubs (minimum attendance one per week).

Lectures

More than 20 hours of neuroscience lectures during the Michaelmas and Lent terms.

Practicals

Research training modules – must complete three out of the five to seven modules offered.

Posters and Presentations

Students may participate in a symposium where they will have the opportunity to present their research. Students will be encouraged to join cognate learned societies in order to give presentations arising from their projects at relevant conferences.

Taught/Research Balance Equal Taught/Research

Feedback

Students will receive regular oral feedback and advice from their supervisor about performance and research direction throughout the course, and students can also expect to receive termly formal feedback reports via the Postgraduate Feedback and Reporting System.

The °Ç¸ç³Ô¹Ï publishes an annual which sets out the University’s expectations regarding feedback.

Assessment

Thesis / Dissertation

A report on the research project, not exceeding 10,000 words in length, including tables, figure legends, and appendices, but excluding bibliography.

Essays

One essay, not exceeding 5,000 words in length. 

Written examination

An MCQ paper on research methods and statistics critical appraisal.

Other

The examination shall include an oral examination on the work submitted by the candidate and on the general field of knowledge within which such work falls.

Key Information


11 months full-time

Study Mode : Taught

Department of Physiology, Development and Neuroscience

Course - related enquiries

Dates and deadlines:

Applications open
Sept. 4, 2024
Application deadline
March 27, 2025
Course Starts
Oct. 1, 2025

Some courses can close early. See the Deadlines page for guidance on when to apply.

Course Funding Deadline
Jan. 7, 2025
Gates °Ç¸ç³Ô¹Ï US round only
Oct. 16, 2024

These deadlines apply to applications for courses starting in Michaelmas 2025, Lent 2026 and Easter 2026.


Similar Courses