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History of Neuroscience - Francis Crick Interview

Offered By: Society for Neuroscience via YouTube

Tags

Neuroscience Courses Molecular Biology Courses Consciousness Courses Biophysics Courses

Course Description

Overview

Delve into a captivating 59-minute archival interview with Nobel Prize-winning English molecular biologist, biophysicist, and neuroscientist Francis Crick, conducted by the Society for Neuroscience on April 20-21, 2002. Explore Crick's groundbreaking work, including his co-discovery of the DNA molecule structure in 1953 with James D. Watson. Gain insights into his perspectives on consciousness, visual awareness, attention and memory, the binding problem, conscious and unconscious vision, coalitions and essential nodes, and future directions in neuroscience. Listen to Crick's personal reflections and discover the impact of his contributions to the field. Part of the Society for Neuroscience's "The History of Neuroscience in Autobiography" series, this interview offers a unique opportunity to learn from one of the most eminent senior neuroscientists of our time.

Syllabus

Society for Neuroscience Archival Interview April 20 - 21, 2002
Francis Crick, Ph.D.
Consciousness: Approaching the Problem
Visual Awareness
Attention and Memory
The Binding Problem
Conscious and Unconscious Vision
Coalitions and Essential Nodes
Future Directions
Personal Reflections


Taught by

Society for Neuroscience

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