It is an incredibly exciting time to be a neuroscience student. The number of career paths open to Ñý¼§Ö±²¥ who graduate with a degree in Neuroscience is increasing on almost a daily basis.
One established pathway is within the healthcare and biomedical sectors, encompassing everything from patient care to pharmaceutical research. In many instances, health-related careers require an advanced degree (e.g., M.D., Ph.D., D.D.S, P.T., P.A.) while others, including laboratory or clinical research technician, healthcare manager, medical or pharmaceutical sales, are open to graduates with Bachelor's degrees.

What Can I Do With This Major?
The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics predicts a growth rate of 13% between 2012 and 2022 for medical science jobs, including neuroscientists, which is as fast as the national average for all occupations.
"Apple, Google, and Facebook are raiding animal research labs: Neuroscientists studying birds, mice, and fish are landing seven-figure salaries to help advance artificial intelligence, self-driving cars, and more."
- Bloomberg Businessweek: McBride and Vance, 2019.
"Cognitive science. This relatively new interdisciplinary field blends elements of psychology, computer science, philosophy, neuroscience and linguistics. In other words, it studies the mind, its processes and the nature of intelligence."
- US News & WR: 8 College Majors With Great Job Prospects: Colino, 2018.
"How neuroscience is breaking out of the lab; Nervous-system scientists share how they’re working in a variety of settings."
- Nature: Flemming, 2018.
"Neuroscience Is going to change how businesses understand their customers."
- Harvard Business Review: Furr, Nel and Ramsoy, 2019.