Hello. I have done this type of work and yes this is neuroscience. You can come to this particular work from advanced degrees in computational neuroscience or psychology OR from a medical perspective (neurology or psychiatry) with a research focus. The head of the lab was MD/PhD and the majority of the lab were PhD and then research assistants doing work in service of ultimately pursuing those degrees. If you find this interesting but don't want to go that deeply into the field via advanced degrees, a cool (and lucrative) field is intraoperative EEG monitoring. Another slightly less involved career is EEG tech at a major academic center where you will hook these patients up. I will warn that the latter field is exhausting and less well payed than the others BUT it does give you some background to get into intraoperative monitoring which is a hard field to break into because it is so cool, well-paying and has good work/life balance. Whatever you pursue, good-luck :) Welcome to neuroscience.
Well, I am prosopagnosiac and I can tell that I'm shivering. very accurate!
Fascinating!
thank you rock paper celery
Really interesting but sounds horrifying. I wish i could try it
Looks like fun! Where do I sign up?
Very interesting
Can i know your job ? What's the name of your career? Im really interested
Which major did you study ?
Are you neuroscientist?
Please answer me
You can read Dr. Parvizi's profile here: profiles.stanford.edu/josef-parvizi
Hello. I have done this type of work and yes this is neuroscience. You can come to this particular work from advanced degrees in computational neuroscience or psychology OR from a medical perspective (neurology or psychiatry) with a research focus. The head of the lab was MD/PhD and the majority of the lab were PhD and then research assistants doing work in service of ultimately pursuing those degrees.
If you find this interesting but don't want to go that deeply into the field via advanced degrees, a cool (and lucrative) field is intraoperative EEG monitoring. Another slightly less involved career is EEG tech at a major academic center where you will hook these patients up. I will warn that the latter field is exhausting and less well payed than the others BUT it does give you some background to get into intraoperative monitoring which is a hard field to break into because it is so cool, well-paying and has good work/life balance.
Whatever you pursue, good-luck :) Welcome to neuroscience.
@@matthewgoldfinger8363 that was incredibly helpful!