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Shifting it to Cellular neuroscience

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The term neurobiology is used indistinguishably from Neuroscience (Eg: Principles of Neural Science by Kandel et. al. use the term 'Neurobiology of Behavior'). Using it to describe just the study of neurons at a cellular level would be a restrictive usage. 'Cellular neuroscience' is a term that better reflects this field (Eg. Journal of Neuroscience classifies the single cell electrophysiology (like patch clamp) articles under the heading Cellular/Molecular ; This is also the heading under which Fundamental Neuroscience editors Squire et. al list their sections on action potentials and like [1]). So I propose that neurobiology become a redirect to Neuroscience and its contents moved to a new article to be named Cellular neuroscience. Please give your opinion. Shushruth 07:16, 20 August 2006 (UTC)[reply]

I disagree. No doubt, there is an overlap in usage in some textbooks, but there is a fundamental distinction between neuroscience and neurobiology. A computer scientist for example who does computer simulations of the brain may be called a neuroscientist, but he or she is by no means a neurobiologist. I believe the wikipedia article clearly explains this. Moreover, the definition provided in the article is very much a paraphrase of the definition provided by Gordon Sheperd's textbook neurobiology. The distinction between neurobiology and neuroscience rests on the suffix -biology and -science. Take away the prefix neuro-, and you can still talk about the "biology of behavior" in a "principles of science" textbook. But that would not make biology and science anymore synonymous than neuroscience and neurobiology. As for terms such as "neurobiology of behavior, neurobiology of drug abuse," these phrases simply mean understanding studying the neurocellular bases of behavior from a biological perspective, i.e., no computer modeling, etc. And they all fall into neurobiology. The term "cellular neuroscience" is more restrictive than neurobiology. It is also convenient catergory in the journal of neuroscience, a journal that also publishes works by neuroscientists who are not necessarily neurobiologists.

mezzaninelounge 01:08, 21 August 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Thanks for the explaination mezzanine. I must accept I was wrong. However, I am still trying to categorize and organize all the neuroscience related topics so that they can be entered into via the Neuroscience portal. I could use some suggestions on that count. Thanks! Shushruth 23:11, 21 August 2006 (UTC)[reply]

No problem. Let me know what I can do to help. mezzaninelounge 08:17, 22 August 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Although I generally support mezzanine's comment, I do not agree with his second sentence. Computational modeling is actually the area where the distinction between neuroscience and neurobiology became the more apparent. Computational Neuroscience generally describes a field overlapping cognitive science and system neuroscience. The models developed are either entirely phenomenologic (mathematical description not related to the biological substrate), or based on formal neural networks. On the contrary, Computational Neurobiology is used most often to cover the modeling of cellular behavior (axon growth, synaptic processing etc.) and the multicompartment models based on the cable approximation and description of ion channel (e.g. with the software GENESIS or NEURON). It is true that when it comes to integrate and fire neurons, the frontier is somehow a bit blurry.


You are right. No disagreement =) mezzaninelounge (talk) 00:41, 10 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

"Typeos"

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Hello. I noticed a typo in the fifth line in "Neuronal Function". "....action potentials have the advantage of travelling over long distances of neuronal processes...." I'm juust a wikibeginer, but I just thought I let you know:-)--Blackmage337 17:35, 23 November 2006 (UTC)blackmage337[reply]

Thanks. You can go ahead and make changes to any typos you see. :) mezzaninelounge 19:16, 24 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Merge proposal

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As already remarked above, Neurobiology is just a synonym of Neuroscience and should become a redirect to that article. The contents of the current "neurobiology" article could be merged to Cellular neuroscience. In fact, it seems to me that it could just replace that (stub) article, which does not contain any real info not yet already present here. Any objections? --Crusio (talk) 14:22, 8 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]

Works for me. Looie496 (talk) 17:26, 8 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]
You and I seem to be the only ones that care about this, but let's leave the tag up for another week or so and then if nobody objects, we'll do the move. We'll need an admin to do this, though, because I cannot move this article to an existing one. --Crusio (talk) 18:33, 8 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]
Haven't you read the discussion above? It has already been explained why it shouldn't be merged. 85.219.130.242 (talk) 06:30, 21 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]
Yes, I read that old discussion and I don't agree. Anybody doing computational work in this area is a neuroscientist/neurobiologist, as far as I am concerned. Sure, they may be using only computers and never even touch an animal, but they are concerned with modeling basic biological processes, hence they are biologists. In addition, the current article suggests that "neurobiology" is solely concerned with cellular stuff, which is rather ludicrous. --Crusio (talk) 07:57, 21 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]

I strongly object to any proposal of merger. I would much rather improve the current content in the article. Please bear in mind that the definition of neurobiology in this article was taken from "Neurobiology" by Gordon Sheperd. A merger is not trivial and should be given more thought than a "as far as I'm concerned" rationale. —Preceding unsigned comment added by Danielkueh (talkcontribs) 21:23, 25 April 2009 (UTC) mezzaninelounge (talk) 21:25, 25 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]

  • The first sentence of the lead is sourced to Sheperd and is clear. The rest of the lead is muddled. Note that Sheperd's definition ends with "and mediates behavior". So why then would this exclude behavioral neuroscience?? It doesn't, of course. I'm a behavioral neuroscientist myself. "As far as I'm concerned", that makes me a neurobiologist and a neuroscientist (BTW, I'm also a behavioral neurogeneticist :-). I completely fail to see any difference between "neuroscience" and "neurobiology". If you want to maintain the distinction, you'll have to come up with something better than "I strongly object" and give some reasons and clearly explain what the supposed difference is. Most of this article is not about neurobiology or neuroscience in general, but about cellular neuroscience sensu stricto. What is explained about action potentials and such belongs elsewhere, not in a supposedly general article such as this. What is usable from the content should be merged elsewhere and then this should be made into a redirect to neuroscience. --Crusio (talk) 21:50, 25 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]

Point taken. Let's back up a little bit. I apologize if the tone of my objection may have sounded unflattery. I am well aware that you are a neurogeneticist and I myself am of course a neurobiologist. I agree that this article is not well put together and does requires a major rewrite that better reflects its title. That said, I argue that there is a real distinction between neuroscience and neurobiology. Neuroscience is a much broader term. It is not just about the subject matter, it is also about the approach. Neurobiology, being first and foremost a biological science, is much more restrictive than neuroscience as it studies the nervous system and its components within the context of evolution, cell biology, physiology, and behavior which tend to be the major themes in biology. It is also first and foremost, an academic science and not a clinical or a translational science as it is concerned with basic fundamental concepts that describe the structure and function of the nervous system, and how these structures and functions are evolutionarily conserved in all animals, whether vertebrates or invertebrates. In fact, much of our understanding of the biophysics of neurobiology came from the use of invertebrates. Granted, these things are also included in neuroscience, but like everything else, it is a matter of scope and emphasis. I understand that laypersons and some neuroscientists/neurobiologists may use these term interchangeably, but to merge these two articles would be a disservice. Rather than doing a merger, I would propose instead a "major reorganization and rewrite" of this article in keeping with all other standard neurobiology texts. mezzaninelounge (talk) 22:16, 25 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]

I saw the Harvard webpage. Yes, they do use it interchangeably. But consider the context. If A is a subdivision of A` and if I use A` alongside A and vice versa does not mean A` = A. In fact, it is common for life scientists to use science and biology interchangeably (e.g., scientific research, biological research, or I'm a scientist, I'm a biologist) but surely you would agree that science is more than just biology. mezzaninelounge (talk) 22:32, 25 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]

As you say, point taken. Every cow is a mammal, but not every mammal is a cow. If I understand you correctly, then you argue that neuroscience = neurobiology + something else. The "something else" being translational and clinical approaches. Is that correct? It reminds me of the discussions when I was working in a psychiatry department, where someone once remarked that as soon as a neurobiological (or neurological, I guess you would call that) basis was found for some disorder, it ended being a psychiatric disorder and became a neurological one (think, Alzheimer, Parkinson, Huntington, etc). I see the point, but I don't think that it is fundamental. (But then, I am someone who thinks that medicine is a subdiscipline of biology...). I am afraid that "a matter of scope and emphasis" sounds way too fuzzy for my taste. Studying declarative memory using MRI in normal humans, amnesiac mutants in Drosophila, fundamental mechanisms underlying the degeneration seen in Alzheimer, LTP involvement (or not...) in memory, etc. etc. up until and including the way alleles of some genes may be involved in the causation of schizophrenia all belongs to neuroscience in my eyes. And the defining part here is "neuro", which cannot be seen separate from "biology". I think you argue that every neurobiologist is a neuroscientist, but not every neuroscientist is a neurobiologist. I argue that you cannot be a neuroscientist and not at the same time be a biologist, hence a neuroscientist is a neurobiologist. --Crusio (talk) 23:08, 25 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]

In an ideal world, I would agree with the statement "you cannot be a neuroscientist and not at the same time be a biologist." I would love that to be the true. But it isn't. You can study neuroscience from a cognitive, behavioral, and clinical perspective, but you cannot do that with neurobiology. For example, a neuropsychologist who provides neurological assessments and does research on the subject may be a neuroscientist, but he or she is by no means a neurobiologist. Another example, an applied mathematician may construct and derive equations to model say a biophysical activity, etc, but if he or she doesn't do any experiments that involve "living systems" whether it is a bacteria, a zygote, an eye, or even a full blown in vivo animal, he or she is not a neurobiologist. The biology is simply not there. Finally, one more example, an M.D. who does surgery may use the techniques and knowledge that neuroscientist develops, but unless he or she contributes to the building of knowledge, that M.D. is not a scientist no matter how many lab coats he or she may wear. He or she is a highly skilled technician and I do not mean this in any derogatory sense. Thus, I argue that there is a difference, that is both real and fundamental. Being a biologist, let alone a neurobiologist is more than just using a graphing program, an imaging device, etc, it is the whole package. It is about doing basic science to answer questions and problems that are fundamental to our understanding of the biology of the nervous system. These answers may or may not have translational or clinical value. Call me old school, but you don't become a biologist by majoring in biology or calling yourself a biologist. You become a biologist by DOING biology. I am not being sentimental when I say this, "I have met many neuroscientists, but I cannot say I have met many neurobiologist." mezzaninelounge (talk) 18:36, 26 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]

One more clarification. Neuroscience may or may not be neurobiology, but it is not "neurobiology + something else." Just as a mammal may or may not be a cow, but it is not "a cow + something else." mezzaninelounge (talk) 18:39, 26 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]

  • I completely agree that an MD applying techniques based on knowledge developed by others is not a scientist (and I prefer that my physician is a skilled technician, rather than a scientist trying to figure things out, there's nothing derogatory in that, I agree). However, I don't agree with the rest of your statement. Is somebody modeling predator-prey relationships on a computer not a biologist? similarly about an ethologist, studying animal responses in the wild, or another scientist studying animal responses to problems posed to them in a laboratory setting? I still fail to see the difference between neurobiology and neuroscience, given these parallels. To me, all these persons are, indeed, doing biology. As for the "something else", what I meant is, a cow is a mammal. A fox is a mammal, but not a cow. Cows and foxes are mammals. So I interpret your point as neurobiology is neuroscience, but there are some things that are neuroscience, but not neurobiology. My point is that I cannot envision something belonging to the realm of neuroscience, but not being biology. --Crusio (talk) 18:45, 26 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]

"I cannot envision something belonging to the realm of neuroscience, but not being biology." Again, in an ideal world, where all neuroscience and neuroscience related training program are run ONLY by biology-minded faculties and researchers and produce only "biology-minded individuals," then yes, I would agree. But it is not. I find it misleading and even unprofessional if say an economist who first uses the tools of EEG to study consumer behavior and then calls himself a neurobiologist. At best (and even then, I wonder), he is a neuroscientist or more specifically neuroeconomist, but not a neurobiologist. For that professional, the end is not the biology of decision making as much as using biological tools to predict and study decision making itself. Likewise, I know many old school neurobiologist who still to this day build their own amplifiers, recording instruments, etc, but I would never for one moment call them engineers. Likewise, if an ecologist who uses statistical tools to study and model population growth, he or she may be considered a computational biologist, but he or she is not a statistician and I would argue the reverse is also true. There are professional statisticians who provide services tailored for biologist, but the statisticians themselves are not biologist. So, in response to the examples you gave. If the person who "models predator-prey" relationships is indeed the person who has done or at the very least design those experiments in this field, answers questions relevant to this field such as the change in gene flow, evolution, adaptation, etc and THEN uses a computer program or a piece of graph paper to model predator-prey relationships to provide a quantitative description to buttress his or her story, then yes, he or she is a bona-fide biologist. But if or she does exploratory data analysis for a living and happens to read a couple of biology journal articles on the Internet database, interacts with some biology colleagues, and then puts his or her two cents in by helping to model a growth trend in population, he or she is not a biologist anymore than an English literature professor who talks about how his or her emotions is mediated by his or her amygdala. mezzaninelounge (talk) 19:10, 26 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]

  • This is not getting clearer to me. You seem to be arguing that someone's intentions, or previous experiences, or what academic courses they followed, will distinguish the neurobiologists from the neuroscientists. Even if that were true, I doon't see how that differentiates neurobiology from neuroscience. If yoour above described EEG experiment were not carried out by an economist, but by someone who up till then had been heavily involved in electrophysiological studies on, say, hippocampal slices, would it now suddenly be neurobiology? (And could economists then argue that it was not part of their field?) --Crusio (talk) 19:30, 26 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]

Intentions may be correct but the question or problem so to speak is more accurate. I am arguing that an economist is interested in say consumer behavior is not so much interested in the biological bases of consumer behavior as much as using the neurobiological or psychophysiological tools to study and predict consumer behavior. Likewise, a biologist who builds his or her own amplifier to amplify extracellular recordings from say an earthworm is not an engineer because he is not doing work or answering questions that builds on engineering as much as it is building on neurobiological knowledge. The point is this, neuroscience encompasses the economist's work, but neurobiology doesn't.mezzaninelounge (talk) 02:24, 27 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]

One thing that might be widely considered neuroscience-but-not-neurobiology, it would be the study of artificial neural networks. Looie496 (talk) 19:21, 26 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]

Looie496, I agree 100%. =) mezzaninelounge (talk) 19:23, 26 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]

  • Not really. You need an intimate knowledge of the real thing (which is a biological thing), before you can model/simulate it. Just as the mathematician, statistician, or biologist modelling predator-prey relationships is doing biology (even though the person is perhaps not a biologist hi,/herself), the person doing neural network research is doing biological research. Granted, it may be on the intersection with computer sciences, for example, but it will not be pure cmputer science (that's why it's an intersection :-). --Crusio (talk) 19:30, 26 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]
  • It might be illuminating to see what the major journals in this field have to say. Progress in Neurobiology (the journal with the highest impact factor having the word "neurobiology" in its title) gives here its scope as "advances in knowledge in the broad field of neurosciences" (again using it interchangeably with neurobiology). Number 2, Current Opinion in Neurobiology does not give an explicit scope statement that I can find, but two recent articles are rather "psychological" rather than "biological", but still neuroscience, of course ("General mechanisms for making decisions?" and "Early intention understandings that are common to primates predict children's later theory of mind"). There's probably more, but I stopped here... --Crusio (talk) 19:46, 26 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]

So here's where we are. I would say that we agree on several things such as to what is biological and what is not. I guess the question remains, "what is the difference, if any, between neurobiology and neuroscience." You argue that you cannot do neuroscience without neurobiology, hence they are both one and the same. I argue that you can, even if it requires a "little bit of neurobiology." Churchland for example, has a written an interesting book entitled "Neurophilosophy." Yes, she does use concepts and principles of neurobiology to formulate neurophilosophy. But the question remains, is she a neurobiologist (She is a philosopher by training)? Is what she is doing "neurobiology?" Is an electrical engineer a physicist? Is a clinical biopsychologist a psychiatrist? I would say no. Before studying leeches right now, I use to do research in behavioral pharmacology whereby I would study the effects of certain psychoactive substances on operant behavior. I took several graduate level in neurobiology and pharmacology to better understand the mechanisms of these substances. At best, I was an expert reader on this subject at that time. I did work that was at the intersection, as you say, between the two fields. But I had no illusions, I was not a neurobiologist as I did not do neurobiology research or neurobiology questions. The questions that I was asking were not biological anymore than the questions asked by a Piaget educational researchers who studies learning in children. Nevertheless, I did present my results at the Society for Neuroscience alongside other psychopharmacology students and researchers. I may have studied a subject that involve the nervous system and may allow myself the liberty to call myself a neuroscientist at that time, but I was not a neurobiologist and would not dare declare as such when standing alongside other neurobiologists at that time.mezzaninelounge (talk) 19:53, 26 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]

  • I agree that an electrical engineer is not a physicist. However, the things he does are based on physics. Anybody researching better methods of electrical engineering would by rights be called a physicist. There is a difference between the practitioners and the field of inquiry. --Crusio (talk) 20:17, 26 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]

http://www.apa.org/journals/bne/description.html Behavioral Neuroscience is a journal published by the American Psychological Association. It is a reasonably good journal that contains many articles published by neuroscientists trained in Psychology Departments or by physiological psychologist (behavioral neuroscientist or biopsychologist as they are called now). I suspect more publications to be from neuroscientists from neuroscience department and programs. In any event, I would say they have decent neurobiology research in there, but I would also say they also have a lot of neuroscience but not neurobiology research in this journal.mezzaninelounge (talk) 19:58, 26 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]

  • And how exactly does behavioral neuroscience not belong to biology? Certainly not just because the journal Behavioral Neuroscience is published by the APA? I consider myself a behavioral neuroscientist and all of my training has been in biology. --Crusio (talk) 20:17, 26 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]

I may be wrong, but I suspect the term "behavioral neuroscience" may have a different meaning and connotation in the States than it does in Western Europe. Often, when North American scientists introduce themselves as Behavioral Neuroscientists, they are usually scientists who take a biological approach to answer what is traditionally psychological questions, e.g., anxiety, etc in psychophysiology. Again, I may not have hard evidence to back this up, but I am basing this on my readings of articles, textbooks, and interactions with other neuroscientists who do call themselves behavioral neuroscientists. The difference may in fact be petty. I also know neurobiologist who do not call themselves behavioral neuroscientists but instead, call themselves "neuroethologist," to emphasize the "natural type" of behavior and that they are studying these behaviors for their own sake, which is in contrast to behavioral neuroscientists who use animal behavior from rats and monkeys to model human behavior. With respect to the APA journal, many articles in it indeed are biological but just as many I would say are hybrid or not purely biological but more biopsychological,or quite neuroscientific =). mezzaninelounge (talk) 20:28, 26 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]

  • You're definitely correct about the transatlantic differences. If you go to meetings of the European Brain and Behaviour Society, you see work that often (but certainly not always) is more "psychological" in scope than if you go to the meetings of the International Behavioral Neuroscience Society. As for neuroethology, that is kind of a special case. Ethologists in many respects (this is a personal opinion, mind you) resemble a sect. They don't have much contact outside their sect and they don't easily let strangers in. So when ethologists started looking at the nervous system, they called themselves neuroethologists. The difference with other behavioral neuroscientists is mainly one of approach (they tend to study behavioral in more natural settings) and species (anything, except your usual rodents and fruit flies...:-) I do think that all those differences are petty. But it is incorrect to say that behavioral neuroscientists use rats or monkeys to model human behavior. Yes, that is what is often said, but (1) many behavioral neuroscientists are interested in their animal subject for itself, not as a model for anything and (2) in the current funding climate it is often easier to get funding if you claim that what you are investigating has some bearing on human pathologies and such. In any case, even people that want to study, say, the neurobiological bases of anxiety by using a rat as a model for the human condition are biologists. But I think that we are diverging too much in our discussion. The problem here is not what a particular researcher calls himself. It is whether there are real differences between the concepts of "neurobiology" and "neuroscience". Up till now, you haven't convinced me at all, if anything, I think your arguments actually demonstrate my point... :-) --Crusio (talk) 21:20, 26 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]

OK, you are right. I think we should narrow our reasons. Here are mine for keeping neurobiology separate from neuroscience. The reasons are that:

A) Neuroscience is a broader term that encompasses biological, cognitive, psychological, mathematical, engineering, etc approaches to the study of the nervous system. It is a term appropriate for any basic, translational, applied, medical, and clinical research that involves the nervous system, whether directly or indirectly. It is more inclusive and open.

B) Neurobiology is more restrictive. The term itself connotes a biological approach of some kind, by studying the nervous system and its components for its own sake. It is first and foremost a basic science and its subject matter is the biology of the nervous system.

C) Not to digress too much, but even the practitioners are a little different. Science is after all, a human enterprise and our knowledge is based on how scientists approach them. Thus, a neurobiologist who does neurobiological research would emphasize and study the biological bases of the nervous system and answer questions about the nervous system that are germane to biologists such as the structure, function, and evolution of ion channels or an evolutionary trend towards cephalization in vertebrates and some invertebrates. A neuroscientist "may or may not" do this. And this I think is a real and fundamental difference. As subtle as it may seem to some, I think it is one of those important nuances that would be lost if we were to merge the two articles together.

D) If you agree that there is a difference between science and biology or science and physics for example, then surely you must agree that there is a difference between neuroscience and neurobiology, biophysics and bioscience, biochemistry and chemical science, behavioral biology and behavioral neurobiology, etc. The list goes on. These words have important meanings that I think should not be taken lightly or use too loosely so as to be vacuous.

At this point, you are right, we do agree more than we disagree. I won't push this much further except to say that perhaps we could invite "neurowikipedians" or neuroadmins (I don't know any) to take a vote or come to some consensus. As you know, I prefer that we do a major revision to the article first. If that doesn't work, then perhaps I may be persuaded to try another solution such as the one that you made earlier even though I might find it a little painful. =) mezzaninelounge (talk) 01:49, 27 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]

Well, thanks for giving my suggestion a chance at least. Given the size of this article, revisions will take a while. mezzaninelounge (talk) 15:39, 30 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]

Arbitrary section break

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My attention was brought to this by a note that Crusio left at the neuroscience wikiproject talk page. I've read the talk here, and I pretty much agree with Crusio and Looie. I think that the issue of how professional researchers might choose to define themselves for professional purposes is something of a distraction from the real point here, which is what is informative and helpful to encyclopedia readers. Neurobiology is a (major) subset of neuroscience. The term "neurobiology" is also an older one than "neuroscience." It makes better sense, when creating separate pages about the various subsets of neuroscience, to name them as "cellular neuroscience," behavioral neuroscience," and so on, rather than as "neurobiology." In my opinion, neurobiology should be a redirect to neuroscience. The neuroscience page should be checked critically to make sure that it adequately covers the "biological" aspects of the field. The content of the present neurobiology page should be merged into cellular or wherever else it fits best. --Tryptofish (talk) 18:00, 11 May 2009 (UTC)[reply]
The general way to solve conflicts like this one is to refer to authoritative sources. --Ettrig (talk) 12:15, 13 May 2009 (UTC)[reply]
As a first indication, note that Open Directory chose the merge route. Note also how the Neurobiology Department at Harvard Medical school intermixes the words without any hint of distinction. I read them as saying that neuroscience is their field. --Ettrig (talk) 12:28, 13 May 2009 (UTC)[reply]
That's a nice idea, but after spending a half hour googling for every combination that occurred to me, I haven't been able to find a single authoritative source that explicitly discusses the relationship between the two terms. Looie496 (talk) 16:34, 13 May 2009 (UTC)[reply]
Well, the phrases "neurobiology and neuroscience" or "neuroscience and neurobiology" appear pretty frequently, even in strong sources, so it's clear that people are at least unsure that the two are the same -- it's just very difficult to find anybody who is explicit about it. Looie496 (talk) 17:54, 13 May 2009 (UTC)[reply]

To me, the following statement from the link above shows that the terms are interchangeable (my italisations), especially the last two occurrences: "The Department of Neurobiology, established in 1966 with Stephen W. Kuffler as Chair, was the first of its kind. The intent was to bring together members of traditional departments-- physiologists, biochemists, and anatomists-- in order to understand the principles governing communication between cells in the nervous system. This interdisciplinary approach was revolutionary at the time, and the interdisciplinary theme has continued to permeate the evolution of the field of neuroscience ever since. The founding faculty and their students posed questions and made discoveries that helped define the field of modern neurobiology. The Department emphasized scholarship and education from the start, and many young scientists who thrived in this atmosphere went on to seed neuroscience programs throughout this country and abroad. The expansion of neuroscience research over the past generation has been astounding. The excitement and advances of modern neurobiology have attracted many superb scientists and some of the very best students in the biological sciences." --Ettrig (talk) 18:20, 13 May 2009 (UTC)[reply]

Do we have consensus to go ahead with the redirect? I think so. --Tryptofish (talk) 18:30, 13 May 2009 (UTC)[reply]
I am a little perplexed by the reasons provided by redirecting neurobiology to neuroscience. Tryptofish mentions that "neurobiology" is a "major subset" of "neuroscience," yet, proposes to make neurobiology a redirect to neuroscience,which in a nutshell, makes it equivalent to neuroscience. I agree how professionals define themselves is not the main point here. Yet, I find it interesting that reasons provided for the merger are based on professionals (Stephen Kuffler) and departments (Harvard) that train professionals. I do not believe there is any consensus at this point. The reasons provided for making neuroscience and neurobiology are based on how these two words are "loosely" used. That's like saying psychoanalysis and psychology are synonymous terms, which may be true in Hollywood and among laymen, but academically inaccurate.mezzaninelounge (talk) 20:52, 13 May 2009 (UTC)[reply]
When I referred to it being "a (major) subset," I was making the point that it is part of neuroscience, rather than separate from it. I then went on to explain, for reasons distinct from professional turf terms and "loose" usages, how defining "parts" of neuroscience works better, for our encyclopedic purposes, if we use terms such as "behavioral neuroscience," "cellular neuroscience," and so on, rather than "neurobiology." Thus, I think the reasons for the redirect are more substantial than those which you mentioned. --Tryptofish (talk) 21:04, 13 May 2009 (UTC)[reply]
P.S. This just occurred to me. At bottom, the question about any redirect is whether a general reader, looking for a topic and typing a term into the search box, will find what they are looking for. It seems to me that someone typing in "neurobiology" will be best served by finding neuroscience (if and only if the page deals adequately with the biological aspects of the field!), and will be poorly served by finding a page that is sort of about cellular neuroscience only, and not about the other aspects of neuroscience. --Tryptofish (talk) 21:16, 13 May 2009 (UTC)[reply]

Duly noted. Biology is also a part of science and not separate from it. Should we also make biology a redirect of science and restrict scientific categories to "mechanical science," "electrical science," living science, etc? I just don't see how making one term a redirect to another for administrative purposes is a good reason merging the two articles mezzaninelounge (talk) 21:13, 13 May 2009 (UTC) P.S. That's a good point. I suspect the reader who is interested in the biology of the nervous system would be disappointed to find a redirect to an article that is extremely broad and provides only brief mentions on reflexes and relationships with other fields. Perhaps the best solution would be to expand or complete the categories below the neurobiology article so as to make it more complete.mezzaninelounge (talk) 21:20, 13 May 2009 (UTC)[reply]

We had an edit conflict, so my P.S. went in without seeing your reply here. By the way, please indent. I think your science analogy is a straw-man argument. Biology, chemistry, physics, even neuroscience, are such large subject areas that, of course, they merit pages of their own, separate from the page on science. What you are really advocating is having one page called Biology, and another called Life sciences. (And responding to our second edit conflict, I don't think expanding the categories in a life sciences article would solve the problem.) --Tryptofish (talk) 21:24, 13 May 2009 (UTC)[reply]
Biology is the study of life and life science, is well the study of life. That's fine and life science is appropriately a redirect to biology. I don't see how that parallels my argument about neurobiology and neuroscience. One considers the the "biology" of the nervous system, and the other considers "everything that is scientific" about the nervous system. Again, I still don't see the merits of merging the two. mezzaninelounge (talk) 21:38, 13 May 2009 (UTC)[reply]
  • So you would want to separate "biology" from "life science": One is on biology, the other is about "everything that is scientific about life". I really think you'll have to come up with a better definition of "neuroscience" vs "neurobiology" if you want to keep arguing that the two are different. --Crusio (talk) 21:45, 13 May 2009 (UTC)[reply]
No, I don't. One is on biology, which is the science of life, and one is the science of life, which is life science. Same thing. No contradictions there. =) mezzaninelounge (talk) 01:33, 14 May 2009 (UTC)[reply]
And completely in the same way, neurobiology is the science of the nervous system, and the other is the science of the nervous system, which is neuroscience. Same thing, no contradictions here either.... :-) --Crusio (talk) 11:01, 14 May 2009 (UTC)[reply]
I don't want to be overly forceful, and if there are aspects of this that haven't been brought out yet, we should discuss them; but otherwise it seems that we are recapitulating arguments that have already been made, and that you are in a minority of one here which seems likely to stay that way. Looie496 (talk) 21:27, 13 May 2009 (UTC)[reply]
Looie496, thanks for making the point . I am well of that =). To me, the arguments and the reasons have not changed except that there are a couple more who agree with the view that both article needs to be merged. I am making the point once again that (1) I am not convinced by the reasons and (2) that I think we should consider other options.mezzaninelounge (talk) 21:38, 13 May 2009 (UTC)[reply]
As for your reply to me, someone who wants to know about the biology of the nervous system either wants to know about everything scientific about the nervous system, or will look through an article about everything scientific to find what they want. As for your reply to Looie, none of us seem to be convinced by you. I think we are all treating you very respectfully, but at some point consensus is consensus. --Tryptofish (talk) 21:49, 13 May 2009 (UTC)[reply]
Tryptofish. Before I continue with this, please clarify one thing here. How would you like to reach this "consensus?" Right now, we are obviously not in any agreement. In fact, if there was a "consensus," I thought there was implicit agreement that we should make changes to the article first before taking radical steps to merge the two and move its contents to cellular neuroscience (see final discussion between me and Crusio above). Till this very moment, I have yet to see from you one single sentence that directly addresses my arguments about why neuroscience and neurobiology (see final points above with Crusio) should be kept separate. So far, the arguments I see are based on loose usage, false analogies, and appeals to majority (and a slight hint of force). If you have a better case, I am all ears. But till then, there is no "voluntary consensus." =) mezzaninelounge (talk) 22:59, 13 May 2009 (UTC)[reply]
  • Daniel, I got tired and basically gave up. But it is not Tryptofish who has not given concrete arguments, it is you who comes up with specious arguments and you are the only one here maintaining that there is a meaningful difference between neuroscience and neurobiology. Please provide a clear definition of both, based on some reliable sources (something nobody has been able to do yet), or please admit that you are running out of arguments and that this is all basically just your personal opinion. Thanks. --Crusio (talk) 23:04, 13 May 2009 (UTC)[reply]
Thank you for that, Crusio. Daniel, no one is hinting force. In fact, we have willingly discussed this with you at great length without actually making the redirect. As for consensus, please note this. --Tryptofish (talk) 23:16, 13 May 2009 (UTC)[reply]
Crusio, there is a definition in the neurobiology page, which has been sourced to Gordon Shepherd. If you prefer, you can also check "Foundations of Neurobiology" by Fred Delcomyn. You can also find the definition for "neuroscience" on the society for neuroscience website? <http://www.sfn.org/index.aspx?pagename=whatIsNeuroscience>. This is not my "personal opinion" and I don't know what you mean by "running out" of arguments as if I need to keep churning out new ones each time. If you are dead set on making this change regardless of the reasons against it, then at the very least, come up with a simple process for achieving that. I proposed a two step process, which I thought you agreed to initially (see comments above) or a vote of some kind. Otherwise, yes, you will continue to hear from me about why I object. =) mezzaninelounge (talk) 23:26, 13 May 2009 (UTC)[reply]
Tryptofish (since we are now on a first real name basis, it would be nice to know yours too), I am well aware of the consensus rule. But did you also read the other rule below it? And while we are on this subject, I suggest we should have a vote on the wikipedia neuroscience page. This is obviously an issue that we have devoted some time and intellectual capital to, and so at the very least, I am asking for the entire neuroscience group (if possible) to be briefed about this issue very quickly and set a deadline for a vote. I believe I have seen precedence for this sort of thing.mezzaninelounge (talk) 23:38, 13 May 2009 (UTC)[reply]
Mezzanine, please comment on the content, not the editor. You identify yourself, in the pipe of your signature as well as at your user page, as having the first name Daniel. Some people here call me Trypto, and that's fine with me. I do not choose to provide my real name, as is my right in this system, and it is none of your business. Instead of patronizing me about whether I read the part about finding a middle ground, please note that I earlier suggested checking the neuroscience article to make sure it adequately covers neurobiology. I'm pleased that Looie has opened a discussion, but I have got to say that your (mezzanine's) comments here are bordering on disruptive. --Tryptofish (talk) 00:49, 14 May 2009 (UTC)[reply]
Trypto, you are well within your rights to conceal your identity. I myself address individuals based on their signatures that appear on the page itself, which may be their real name or pseudonym. If someone were to address me by my real name, I assumed that they obtained it when editing this page or when reading my profile page. That is also fine by me. All I asked was reciprocity. Addressing me by my real name (which is not the default appearance) without revealing yours can come across (intentional or not) as a little, and just a little, condescending. As for patronizing you, please understand that that was not my intention. I apologize if I caused any offense. I thought my comments matched the tone of the individuals that I was having a discussion with. mezzaninelounge (talk) 01:57, 14 May 2009 (UTC)[reply]
  • How silly is this going to get? Apparently this whole discussion of identity was caused by the fact that I addressed "mezzaninelounge" as Daniel. Well, guess what, your username IS "Danielkueh". That's how I see it all the time in my watchlist, that's how I see it if I look at diffs, as is my habit in this kind of discussion. So at some point I just didn't think of "mezzaninelounge" any more and addressed you as Daniel. If "mezzaninelounge" would have been your username, instead of just being something that you must have added to your signature under "User Preferences", I would have addressed you like that and the confusion would not have arisen. If you feel that addressing you by your real name is condescending, then that is too bad (and not a little bit strange either). As it is not only your real name, but also your username, I am not going to apologize for using it. --Crusio (talk) 06:37, 14 May 2009 (UTC)[reply]
Crusio is apparently your real name and you are more than welcome to address me by mine (nothing strange at all about that). If you looked at what I said carefully, I never said "you" were condescending and I never asked you or anybody to apologize either. I was merely remarking that addressing someone by their real name while concealing one's identity can at times be perceived differently by other people. I am not gonna comment on whether it is silly or not to discuss this other than the fact that I was merely responding to a comment that part of my comments were perceived as disruptive. mezzaninelounge (talk) 09:37, 14 May 2009 (UTC)[reply]
OK, lets all cool down people. Mezzaninelounge, I don't feel you were treated condescending by Trypto, I think you overeacted a bit. Trypto did perhaps exagerate somewhat when he said you were being "borderline disruptive" (although I admitted already earlier that I start to get tired of this endless discussion). As for the real issue: yes, Shepard provided a definition of Neurobiology. And how does his definition somehow exclude some other parts of Neuroscience? --Crusio (talk) 10:57, 14 May 2009 (UTC)[reply]
That's basically what we're doing here, and there is a pointer to this page from Wikipedia Talk:WikiProject Neuroscience, but if you like we can do it formally. I have just opened Wikipedia Talk:WikiProject Neuroscience#RFC: merging the Neuroscience and Neurobiology articles -- please express your opinion there. I don't think we need to recapitulate the discussion yet again, as long as people have a pointer to the material here. Looie496 (talk) 00:01, 14 May 2009 (UTC)[reply]
Crusio, you are right, I might have overreacted. My mistake. Let's move on. I was trying to make the point that Shepherd's definition defines neurobiology as the study of neurons, etc, which I know you might find this ambiguous, is a matter of scope and emphasis. The SfN website describes neuroscience broadly as the science of the nervous system, which includes among other things, medicine, etc. This was also distinction that was made by Fred Delcomyn in "Foundations of Neurobiology." The point here is that in addition to scope and emphasis, there is a distinction made along the lines of goals of each field. Neurobiology is a basic science whereas Neuroscience may be basic, clinical, applied, and translational. Again, people might find this trivial or pedantic. I admit I don't. When I see an electrical engineer building a AI machine and used the human brain as an inspiration, he/she is not a neurobiologist and his/her work is not neurobiology by Shepherd's definition. The engineer was not interested in the study of neurons as much as designing a system that parallels or emulates the workings of the nervous system. I would agree that he may be a neuroscientist in that his work is scientific and it does involve the nervous system, albeit, at a superficial level. In response to Gariepy's rationale. Yes, no doubt, the tools in the field has changed, etc just like all other fields have changed. But the basic foundations and principles of the field hasn't. What distinguishes say a molecular biologist from say a biochemist is not necessarily the tools used by both, but by how the type of knowledge that was created. And I think this is an important distinction. Neurobiologist to my mind are biologist in the sense that they study things with an eye on the major themes of biology such as evolution, energy (signal) conversion, behavior, systems, etc. In the end, I suspect that the merger will take place and I am glad that we had this discussion. I know that it may be a little long drawn and I may have been a pain in rear at times, but I do hope that in the end, I was able to make my point of why I think the articles should continue to be separate and that I hope folks were able to, for just 1 second, appreciate nuance that was emphasized here. mezzaninelounge (talk) 14:07, 14 May 2009 (UTC)[reply]

Thank you Looie496 for doing that. =)mezzaninelounge (talk) 00:03, 14 May 2009 (UTC)[reply]

Just wanted to explain my vote in the Neuroscience talk page supporting a merge : I think the debate here is due to 2 different visions of what Biology is. On one side the people who define biology by its definition in any dictionnary (the science that studies living organisms) and on the other side those who define biology as the scientific tradition of what is done specifically in biological sciences departments in our universities. I think it is not trivial that computational neuroscience came up as a dividing issue, as this is a new tool that for the 1st group of people should be included in biology, and for the second group of people should be classified in a larger field. I think that creating new categories of sciences just because we discover new tools makes no sense; especially if the new techniques ask the same questions that the science was asking before the appearance of the new technique. Simulations are not exclusive to neurosciences. In cell biology, liver physiology, etc ... I have seen in those domains some simulations. Should we create 2 articles : Liver sciences and liver biology, because some simulations have been made about physiological processes in the liver ? Let's not forget that this is what all this is about : neuro means neurons or the brain, and we're currently discussing about whether to merge 'Brain biology' to 'Brain sciences'. Jean-Francois Gariepy (talk) 13:04, 14 May 2009 (UTC)[reply]
Jean-Francois Gariepy, thank you for making that point. Upon reflection, that line of reasoning for wanting to merge the two articles was what I was looking for. Thanks again. =) mezzaninelounge (talk) 13:50, 14 May 2009 (UTC)[reply]
I just want to say sorry for having gotten hot under the collar. --Tryptofish (talk) 16:59, 14 May 2009 (UTC)[reply]

Redirect

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We discussed the above very thoroughly here, and reached what I think was consensus at the WikiProject talk page RfC. Since then a lot of time has passed, and I've been periodically making reminder comments, and I'm not aware of any objections. So what I'm about to do, for now, is to create a redirect from this page to neuroscience. The page history here will still be intact for anyone who wants to merge material here into cellular neuroscience or elsewhere. --Tryptofish (talk) 22:52, 27 July 2009 (UTC)[reply]

SFN Wikipedia initiative

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Let's be aware of Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Neuroscience#Society for Neuroscience is Coming. The Neuroscience and Neurobiology articles are among the first place where new and naive people are likely to show up -- this might already be happening. Let's try to treat newcomers, who are likely to be scientists or graduate students, with patience and respect if we can, pretty please. In particular, it would be good to make a special effort to avoid harsh or terse reverts to what look like good faith edits. Looie496 (talk) 15:51, 30 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]