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Systems neuroscience explores how neural circuits operate within living organisms. This field aims to comprehend nervous system functionality across multiple scales, from individual cells to complex networks governing processes like vision, hearing, and movement. Given its wide scope, systems neuroscience combines experimental, analytical, and theoretical methods from diverse scientific domains. Notably, many key analytical and theoretical frameworks originated in physics and engineering before being adapted for neurobiological applications. At the microscopic level, researchers examine how single neurons serve as computational elements, studying factors like ion channel distribution, electrical properties, and dendritic structure in neural processing.
Visual system research represents a core emphasis, spanning from light detection in the retina to information processing in thalamic and cortical visual areas, extending to higher brain regions. Significant attention is devoted to studying natural scene perception, attentional mechanisms, and visual segmentation. Additional research areas encompass auditory processing, the neural basis of vocal learning memory, and smell perception mechanisms.