Neuroscience · Florida

Neuroscience colleges in Florida

Neuroscience program coverage in Florida is being verified. Use the filter-first search at /results to find related programs offered in the state.

Neuroscience studies how the brain and nervous system work at the molecular, cellular, and behavioral levels, suiting students drawn to lab research and questions about the mind.

We're still verifying Neuroscience programs in Florida. Try a broader search at /results?q=Neuroscience or browse all colleges in Florida.

What you'll study in a Neuroscience program

  • Cellular and molecular neuroscience
  • Anatomy and physiology of the central nervous system
  • Neural signaling, synapses, and ion channels
  • Behavioral and cognitive neuroscience
  • Neuroanatomy lab dissection and brain imaging methods
  • Electrophysiology and neural recording techniques
  • Biology of neurological and psychiatric disorders
  • Statistics and computational analysis of neural data
  • Independent laboratory research and thesis work

Where a Neuroscience degree can lead

  • Neuroscientist
  • Research Scientist
  • Clinical Research Coordinator
  • Neuropsychologist
  • Medical Scientist
  • Biotech Researcher

Typical pay: Early-career wages vary by employer, region, and experience (BLS, 2024 medical scientists, except epidemiologists median $100,590).

Neuroscience asks how nerve cells signal one another, how circuits in the brain give rise to perception, memory, movement, and emotion, and what goes wrong in conditions affecting the nervous system. Students work across several scales at once: the molecular and biochemical events inside a single neuron, the anatomy and physiology of the central nervous system, and the behavior that emerges when many cells act together. Coursework blends biology, chemistry, and psychology with quantitative methods, and students spend significant time in laboratories learning to record neural activity, image brain tissue, run behavioral experiments on model organisms, and analyze noisy data. Unlike psychology, which centers on behavior and mental processes, or biology, which surveys living systems broadly, neuroscience keeps the nervous system itself as the through-line, connecting wet-lab biology to cognition and clinical questions.

Most people enter the field through a bachelor's degree in neuroscience or a closely related science, and the research-focused careers commonly associated with the major are built on graduate training: independent investigators and many medical scientists typically hold a doctoral degree earned through years of mentored laboratory work and a dissertation. Undergraduate programs are heavy on hands-on labs and often expect a research project or thesis, and students aiming at health professions pair the degree with prerequisite coursework before separate professional school and licensure. A neuropsychologist, for example, completes graduate clinical training and a state license to practice. Graduates work in academic and hospital research labs, biotechnology and pharmaceutical settings, clinical research coordination, and data or technical roles supporting brain research; programs and any professional licensure requirements vary by state and should be verified directly.

In federal data for the closely related occupation of medical scientists, except epidemiologists, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reports a 2024 median wage of $100,590 and projects employment to grow about 8.7% from 2024 to 2034; a doctoral or professional degree is the typical entry-level education for that occupation. National figures are occupation-wide medians across all experience levels, not starting wages or graduate outcomes.

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