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|  | |  | | | Cellular and Molecular Neurophysiology, Third Edition | | | | | | | |
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| | Description | This third edition is the new, thoroughly revised edition of the only current, established and authoritative text focusing on the cellular and molecular physiology of nerve cells. Previously titled Cellular and Molecular Neurobiology, the new title better reflects this focus. The book is hypothesis driven rather than just presenting the facts, and the content is firmly based on numerous experiments performed by the top experts in the field. While the book does cover the important facts, it also presents the background for how researchers arrived at this knowledge to provide a context for the field. It teaches not only how excitable cells work in detail, but also how to construct and conduct intelligent research experiments. This book promotes a real understanding of the function of nerve cells that is useful for practicing neurophysiologists and students in a graduate-level course on the topic alike.
* 80% new or updated material * Fifteen appendices describing neurobiological techniques are interspersed in the text * Now in full color throughout, with more than 400 carefully selected and constructed illustrations * Provides an instructor website with all the images in electronic format, plus additional material |  |
| | Product Details | | Author: | Constance Hammond | | Hardcover: | 416 pages | | Publisher: | Academic Press | | Publication Date: | February 20, 2008 | | Language: | English | | ISBN: | 0123741270 | | Product Length: | 11.09 inches | | Product Width: | 8.78 inches | | Product Height: | 1.01 inches | | Product Weight: | 3.28 pounds | | Package Length: | 11.0 inches | | Package Width: | 8.4 inches | | Package Height: | 1.1 inches | | Package Weight: | 3.2 pounds | | Average Customer Rating: | based on 2 reviews |
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| | Customer Reviews | Average Customer Review: ( 2 customer reviews )
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1 of 1 found the following review helpful:
Excellent Book for Electrophysiology Students Jan 30, 2012
By NeuroSciGradStudent I completely disagree with the other reviewer and found this to be the best introductory text for student starting in electrophysiology. Other textbooks I find are either too vague and oversimplify matters, even when they are supposed to be for graduate level studies. Another issue with electrophysiology textbooks is the heavy mathematical/theoretical explanation of certain concepts that is far beyond the basics and is functionally useless for the new student. This textbook however, is for the neuroscience graduate student beginning in electrophysiology and gives extensive detailed explanations of various concepts and while it does expect a certain level of background (that is provided in undergraduate coursework), I have yet to find a better introductory, graduate-level explanation of electrophysiological concepts. I HIGHLY recommend this.
Poorly Organized, Expert-level Information Nov 28, 2011
By Peter I purchased this book for a class, and was very disappointed with it. Hammond has written a text that is only accessible to people with considerable background knowledge of chemistry, molecular biology and physics. Unless you have studied each of these subjects considerably, I doubt very much that this text will be of any use to you. There is no glossary, and ideas are not explained clearly. Even if you are strong in the prerequisite areas, I suspect that other texts would be much more helpful. There is a lack of organization within each chapter. Hammond may start a bulleted list, for example, interrupt herself to explain a point, and never return to the incomplete list. Typos, while rare, come up far more often than they should in the third edition of a book.
Hammond's writing is convoluted and opaque; qualities that make the rather dry subject matter almost unbearable. Unless you are already predisposed to neurophysiology, please keep away from this book.
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