In the 25 years since From Neuron to Brain was first published, the author's aim has remained constant: to describe how nerve cells go about their business of transmitting signals, how the signals are put together, and how, out of this integration, higher functions emerge. The fourth edition, while maintaining this focus, has been completely reformatted and updated.
This book primarily focuses on auditory physiology, synaptic transmission, vision physiology, & neural maturation, as well as provides a detailed and clear understanding of the basic fundamental background in cellular neurobiology. Starting with the basics structure of ion controls and their proteins, and moves on to higher levels of composition and function, this book lays a comprehensive road map for advanced neural sciences.
the best parts were much better than the best parts of The Cell: A Molecular Approach, while the worst parts were worse than the worst of The Cell.
unfortunately i read the 3rd ed (1992) because i had it from a neuro class i took in college. the 4th ed (2001) would obviously have been much more up to date.
by far the most fascinating stuff was about the visual system. reading the hundreds of pages on ion channels was one of the most masochistic things i've ever done.
factoids: if you inject barbituates into a (right-handed) person's left carotid artery, for a few minutes they can sing but can't speak. inject their right carotid, and they can speak but not sing.
"the dumber the animal, the smarter its retina"
the image of the moon projected onto your retina is about .12 mm in diameter
This is a great intro textbook. It manages to cover complex in sufficient detail to keep it relevant all the way up through thesis-level work, while the detail is sufficient that it won't overwhelm a newcomer. Great review of the basics of neurophysiology and circuitry!
There's a chapter on modified sensory capabilities of ants. They can detect polarized light and use it for navigation. Other than that this is a standard Neurobiology text from neuron to higher order processing in the frontal cortex and short enough for a semester long course.
Textbook of neuro science. Something challenging and something I can brag about with. I always wanted to be a doctor. This is general textbook for students.