Study structure

Degree Curriculum for the Master's Program Neurosciences
Degree Curriculum for the Master's Program Neurosciences

Facts & Figures

Duration: 2-year-program

Credits per year: 60

Language of instruction: English

Accreditation/ Evaluation: until September 30, 2030
according to the system accreditation of the University of Bremen by AAQ Swiss agency of accreditation and quality assurance.

Downloads

Teaching in the Master Program Neurosciences

Teaching in the Master program Neurosciences is based on the concept of inquiry-based learning and inter-disciplinarity. The training within the programme covers the entire spectrum of neuroscience, with a focus on understanding complex networks of neurons and how these give rise to cognition, emotions and consciousness.

The new Master offers a comprehensive and coherent training in the study of the functional principles of neuronal networks using:

  • state-of-the-art methods that allow the observation of the interaction of many neurons (calcium imaging, multielectrode recordings, functional imaging) and their underlying architectures (structural imaging).
  • state-of-the-art methods for modulating neuronal networks for the causal analysis of cognitive processes and for establishing bidirectional interfaces to the brain (optogenetics, electrical stimulation, pharmacogenetics, synthetic biology).
  • innovative techniques for model-based data analysis and interpretation (deep networks, machine learning, predictive coding, information theory) that go far beyond the standard methods of statistical evaluation in the classical neurosciences.

This linking of experimental approaches and their transfer to application is forward-looking. The training forms an interface between basic neuroscientific research and application-oriented research and distinguishes the Bremen M.Sc. Neurosciences.

First Semester

In the first semester, three modules provide fundamental knowledge which covers basic principles and concepts in neuroscience, information processing from cells to networks, and theoretical concepts for describing, analyzing and understanding neural systems. The contents of the lectures are deepened through practical exercises and seminars. The broad spectrum of the courses also serves to bring first-year students from different subject disciplines and countries of origin to a common level of knowledge.

We discuss basic principles of physiology and anatomy of the brain, ranging from processes at the molecular level to the understanding of cognitive functions.

  • Functional Neuroanatomy
  • Cellular and Molecular Neurosciences
  • Clinical Neurosciences

We concentrate on the special focus in the Master Neurosciences in Bremen - the understanding of how the interaction of many cells and networks can lead to cognitive performance and complex behavior. Here, state-of-the-art structural and functional imaging techniques are also addressed, which get to the bottom of the interaction of whole brain areas.

  • Neuronal Networks and Signals
  • Cognitive Neurophysiology
  • Structural and Functional Imaging

We train you in the formal methods of neuroscience and learn basic programming skills, descriptive and inductive statistics, as well as the mathematical description of the brain as a dynamical or information-processing system.

  • Programming
  • Theoretical Neurosciences
  • Statistics and Data Analysis

At the end of the first semester, you choose an in-depth module (Lab Animal Sciences or Advanced Programming: Data Analysis & Modeling) according to your interests and abilities:

  • MN-S1 Advanced Programming: Data Analysis and Modeling
  • MN-S2 Laboratory Animal Science

This module prepares you for specializing in either experimental or computational neuroscience, and is a prerequisite for some elective modules.

Ambitious students can even take both courses if there is sufficient teaching capacity.

Second Semester

In the first week of the second semester, you get familiar with complementary skills like good scientific practice, scientific writing, presentation skills, critical science, data organization and -handling, and media skills.

The basics acquired in the first semester are taken to an advanced level and applied in practical training.

You decide for the first time on your individual preferences.

Advanced Studies will emphasize the development of scientific meta skills more than former courses. You choose three courses from a wide range of topics between basic research and application, offered by the participating departments. There you learn and test advanced research methods. Each of the modules is only offered once per summer semester.

  • MN-DSM Digital Systems Modeling
  • MN-NM Network Modeling and Analysis
  • NM-fMRI Functional MR Imaging
  • MN-CPE Cognitive Psychology and EEG
  • MN-NE Neuro- and Electrophysiology
  • MN-FML Fundamentals of Machine Learning
  • MN-BPR Brain Pattern Recognition
  • MN-CN Cognitive Neuroscience
  • MN-NN Neuronal Networks
  • MN-ONM Optogenetics and Neuroscience Methods
  • MN-BP Behavioral Pharmacology
Students work on their advanced studies in summer semester 2019
Advanced Studies Summer Term 2019; left, from bottom to top: Lara Syrek, Federica Capparelli (tutor), Juliana Groß; right, from bottom to top: Elisa Brauße, Irina Pochinok

Third and Fourth Semester

The next higher stage of subject-related qualification and the further development of meta skills will follow in the third semester, where you start your individual Research Training during two seven-weekly lab-projects or by a hospitation in a clinic:

  • MN-LAB1
  • MN-LAB2

Besides the departments and faculties directly involved in the teaching programme, lab projects can also be performed at selected institutes in Germany or abroad. These courses particularly aim at the consolidation and application of advanced theoretical and practical knowledge and training abilities in the field of experimental design, theoretical analysis, and scientific communication.

At this stage you are prepared to accomplish your Master's thesis in the fourth semester (within six months) either in one of the departments of the lecturers or at various institutes or companies in Germany or abroad.

In the course of the fourth semester, complementary skills will be brought to flower during a Mind Conference at the Hanse-Wissenschaftskolleg Delmenhorst or in Bremen – show your latest scientific results as a poster or in a talk, get into contact with Alumni, discuss your career options with PI's from different departments and get into contact with partners from the industry.

In the 4th semester, a master's thesis is written in one of the participating departments or abroad.

Barbecue at the end of summer 2019
Barbecue at the end of summer 2019; From left to right: Agnes Janssen, Lisa Steffens, Felicitas Neumann, Kim Go, Irina Pochinok; With back to us, from left to right: Lara Syrek, Elisa Brauße, Juliana Groß

Who is who

portait Rolf Drechsler

Welcome to our cutting-edge Computer Architecture Working Group (AGRA), where we're on a mission to solve the most challenging problems in the field!

Our team of talented researchers is passionate about hardware synthesis, testing, and verification, high-level synthesis, RISC-V, and system-level verification methodologies. We're always pushing the boundaries of what's possible, exploring emerging technologies like in-memory computing, approximate computing, and quantum computing. Our work delves into complex topics like polynomial verification, hardware trojans, binary decision diagrams, and hardware/software codesign, and we're developing innovative solutions that are changing the face of the industry. With expertise in formal verification and machine learning for testing and verification, our novel methodologies are rock-solid and reliable. Join us on our journey to revolutionize computer architecture and shape the future of technology!

http://www.informatik.uni-bremen.de/agra

portrait Udo Ernst

Udo Ernst performs research in Computational Neuroscience with particular focus on understanding nonlinear dynamics and flexible information processing in the visual system. He uses methods from Theoretical Physics to investigate and analyze collective phenomena in neural systems (synchronization, pattern formation, criticality). Numerical simulations of complex networks are complemented by innovative data analyses for closely linking theories of brain function to experimental findings.

https://www.bernstein.uni-bremen.de/drupal/node/145

Prof. Dr. Thorsten Fehr in the MRI-Lab and in the EEG-Lab
Prof. Dr. Thorsten Fehr in the MRI-Lab (left) and in the EEG-Lab (right)

Prof. Dr. Thorsten Fehr gives lectures and seminars in Biological Psychology and Cognitive Neuroscience. His main scientific fields are related to complex cognition, decision making, social conflict behaviour, and the development of methods to quantify and to qualify the spatio-temporal complexity of mental processes in the human brain. Main laboratory approaches are functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) and multi-channel electroencephalography (EEG).

www.TFehr.de

portrait Muhammad Hassan

Welcome to our cutting-edge Computer Architecture Working Group (AGRA), where we're on a mission to solve the most challenging problems in the field!

Our team of talented researchers is passionate about hardware synthesis, testing, and verification, high-level synthesis, RISC-V, and system-level verification methodologies. We're always pushing the boundaries of what's possible, exploring emerging technologies like in-memory computing, approximate computing, and quantum computing. Our work delves into complex topics like polynomial verification, hardware trojans, binary decision diagrams, and hardware/software codesign, and we're developing innovative solutions that are changing the face of the industry. With expertise in formal verification and machine learning for testing and verification, our novel methodologies are rock-solid and reliable. Join us on our journey to revolutionize computer architecture and shape the future of technology!

http://www.informatik.uni-bremen.de/agra

portrait photo of Sami Hassan

Our research in the Hassan lab aims to understand brain mechanisms such as cellular and circuit activity patterns that underlie memory-based adaptive behavior. To this end, we apply tools that include modern optical recordings (for example calcium and voltage imaging in the behaving mouse) from neural cells and systems, behavioral analysis, and machine learning. A second aim is to use the results of this research for new insights into neuropsychiatric and neurodevelopmental disease processes.

portrait Matthias Günther

Matthias Günther is physicist at the Fraunhofer-Institute for Digital Medicine MEVIS and professor for MR-physics and -spectroscopy at the Faculty 1 (Physics/Electro-Engineering) of the University of Bremen. His main research focus is on physical background of medical imaging in general and development of new imaging techniques in magnetic resonance imaging and ultrasound imaging in particular. He has a strong interest in assessing physiological processes in the human body to probe state and function of inner organs without the need for extraneous contrast agents.

https://www.mevis.fraunhofer.de/en/research-and-technologies/imaging-physics.html

portrait Michael Koch

Research interests of the Department of Neuropharmacology are the roles of the frontal cortex, limbic system and basal ganglia in the regulation of rodent behavior and its relation to cognitive functions (learning, memory, attention, sensorimotor gating, behavioural flexibility). Main techniques include behavioral pharmacology, brain lesions and histology.

https://www.uni-bremen.de/en/koch/

portrait Margarethe Korsch

Dr. Margarethe Korsch works as a Lecturer in the Department of Neuropsychology and Behavioral Neurobiology (Head: Prof. Dr. Dr. Herrmann). Her research interests focus on the neural underpinnings of interference control and healthy and pathological aging.

https://www.uni-bremen.de/neuropsychologie/team

portrait photo Andreas Kreiter

„The Kreiter lab studies information processing by networks of neurons in the primate brain that implement cognitive functions like visual perception and selective attention. A particular focus is on mechanisms based on neuronal synchronization and oscillations for dynamic information routing and network configuration. For this research, we use (and develop) advanced methods for measuring and influencing the activity of individual or small groups of neurons in the brains of animals performing cognitive tasks.”

https://www.uni-bremen.de/en/brain

portrait Ekkehard Küstermann

The in-vivo-MR group organizes and serves fMRI-measurements in the context of neuroscientific research and education on the 3T human whole body scanner (Siemens VidaFit). Furthermore, methodological developments for research projects in the area of biological and material sciences are carried out on a 7T MRI system (Bruker BioSpec 7/20 USR)

https://www.uni-bremen.de/in-vivo-mr

Ein Portrait von Olivia Masseck

The Masseck lab studies the function of the neuromodulator serotonin (5-HT). 5-HT is involved in many cognitive functions and dysregulation of 5-HT is associated with the development and manifestation of several diseases, such as anxiety and depression. But still the role of 5-HT  in the central nervous system is not well understood. Our lab  investigates  molecular, cellular and network action of 5-HT by combining optogenetics, electrophysiology, calcium imaging and behavioral studies.

For more information: Synthetic Biology

portrait Felix Putze

Dr. Putze’s research interests lie in leveraging neural signals (especially EEG, but also peripheral signals) in real-time for the automatic assessment of cognitive states and processes through Brain-Computer Interfaces. In such investigations, methods for signal processing and machine learning that can deal with real-world noise play a central role.

https://www.uni-bremen.de/csl/institut/team/mitarbeiter/dr-felix-putze

Portrait David Rotermund

David Rotermund covers the technology side of neuroscience (with a focus on the visual system), such as invasive bidirectional BCIs for cortical neuroprostheses (neuroimplant design: hardware including circuit and PCB design, firmware e.g. in VHDL for FPGAs and software in Python, Matlab and C++). A second emphasis is on fundamental mechanisms of the brain, such as information processing (spiking neural networks & machine learning) and data mining of electrophysiological data, including the development of new data analysis tools and the necessary high performance massively parallel computing.

www.neuro.uni-bremen.de, www.neurotec.uni-bremen.de, www.isee.uni-bremen.de

portrait photo Tanja Schultz

"My research and teaching focuses on real-time interpretation of biosignals to adapt technical cognitive systems to user needs. For this purpose I drive with my team at the Cognitive Systems Lab (CSL) the development of AI methods and models, of databases covering speech, motion, muscle and brain activities, and the integration of algorithms, models and findings into prototypes that we evaluated in the lab and in the field."

For more information on CSL https://csl.uni-bremen.de
and my person https://www.uni-bremen.de/csl/institut/direktorin

portrait Detlef Wegener

I am interested in the active shaping of visual perception by cognitive processes and their underlying neuronal mechanisms. My lab uses a variety of neurophysiological tools - from acute, single intraparenchymal electrodes to chronic, epidural ECoG arrays for recording neuronal activity at different spatial scales in both monkey and rodents.

https://www.uni-bremen.de/brain/mitarbeiter

Examination and Admission Board

portrait Olivia Masseck
Chairperson Prof. Dr. Olivia Masseck

Chairperson: Prof. Dr. Olivia Masseck

Scientific Staff

Students

  • Marina Schmidt (Examination Board)
  • Eva Mohsenzadeh (Admission Board)