Definition of neuroscientist in English:
neuroscientist
noun ˈnjʊərəʊˌsʌɪəntɪstˈn(j)ʊroʊˌsaɪəntəst
An expert in neuroscience.
there is a significant and growing need among neuroscientists to exchange experimental data
Example sentencesExamples
- The neuroscientists warned against drawing conclusions until the experiment was over.
- Neuroscientists do not have a tradition of sharing raw data.
- He is a behavioural neuroscientist at Laurentian University in Canada.
- Neuroscientists have used MRIs to study how the brain activities of artists differ from those of non-artists in performing tasks like drawing abstract designs.
- Psychologists and neuroscientists are making progress at understanding how to conquer fear.
- Some neuroscientists think that complex memories may be stored in widely distributed networks of neurons, probably in the cerebral cortex.
- Neuroscientists, like cartographers, have created maps of the brain.
- A team of neuroscientists has been researching this question for some time.
- To a cognitive neuroscientist, the mind is about the brain and its neurological underpinnings.
- My background is in evolutionary biology and economics and my wife is a neuroscientist.
Definition of neuroscientist in US English:
neuroscientist
nounˈn(j)ʊroʊˌsaɪəntəstˈn(y)o͝orōˌsīəntəst
An expert in neuroscience.
there is a significant and growing need among neuroscientists to exchange experimental data
Example sentencesExamples
- The neuroscientists warned against drawing conclusions until the experiment was over.
- Neuroscientists have used MRIs to study how the brain activities of artists differ from those of non-artists in performing tasks like drawing abstract designs.
- A team of neuroscientists has been researching this question for some time.
- He is a behavioural neuroscientist at Laurentian University in Canada.
- My background is in evolutionary biology and economics and my wife is a neuroscientist.
- To a cognitive neuroscientist, the mind is about the brain and its neurological underpinnings.
- Neuroscientists, like cartographers, have created maps of the brain.
- Neuroscientists do not have a tradition of sharing raw data.
- Psychologists and neuroscientists are making progress at understanding how to conquer fear.
- Some neuroscientists think that complex memories may be stored in widely distributed networks of neurons, probably in the cerebral cortex.