About Mrc Centre For Developmental Neurobiology Mphil/phd in Kings College London
Overview
- 2008 RAE Divisional Results: Recognised as contributing 'world-leading quality' research work
-
Research income: £6.5m for 2014/2015
-
Current number of academic staff: 29
-
Current number of research students: 36
-
Current research projects include:
- Lineage specification of cortical circuits
- Integration of chandelier cells in visual cortex networks
- Imaging activity and nucleogenesis in the zebrafish
- Molecular mechanisms of cerebellar evolution
- Morphological and molecular characterisation of transit amplifying granule cell precursors
Description
The human brain is by far the most complex structure on Earth. Consider that it contains a thousand billion neurons, of a thousand or more different, individual types, and that each neuron is wired up to as many as five hundred other neurons; this allows the possibility for a really vast number of alternative wiring configurations - more, it has been estimated, than there are molecules in the universe. Yet the elaborate pattern of connectional networks between neurons that constitutes the machinery for sensation, movement, emotion and thought, is remarkably similar between individuals. Indeed, the basic plan of the brain - the layout of its command and control centres and all but the smallest details of its wiring diagram - appears to be virtually identical between individual humans and recognisably similar between human and mouse.
Furthermore, this 'ground plan' of the brain is genetically determined, or 'hard wired', leaving only the fine details of network construction to be influenced by the electrical activity of circuits and environmental experience. Such is the complexity of the brain's construction, however, that neurobiologists are still far from a complete structural and functional understanding of its basic operations, such as those we have in common with chickens and mice, let alone even beginning to understand the nature of the higher functions - such as thought and consciousness - of which possibly only the human brain is capable.
It is our goal to further the understanding of this structure through our current research programmes, which are:
- Building brains: animal models and tissue engineering
- Assembly and Plasticity of Neural Circuits
- Neurodevelopmental Disorders
Academic qualification equivalents
- A master's degree from a recognized institution in the discipline of interest
English language requirements (one of the below):
- IELTS : 6.5 overall with a minimum of 6.0 in each skill
- TOEFL : 92 overall with a minimum of 23 in writing and 20 in each of the other skills
- PTE : 62 overall with a minimum of 59 in each communicative skill
Kings College London Highlights
University Type |
Public University |
Campus Setting |
Urban |
Establishment Year |
1829 |
No. of Faculties |
9 |
No. of Campuses |
5 |
No. of Residence Halls |
11 |
Graduate Job Rate |
90% |
Expenditure on facility improvement |
1 Billion Pounds |
Applications Accepted |
Online |
Work-Study |
Available |
Intake Type |
Semester wise |
Mode of Program |
Full time and online |
King's College London The Average Tuition Fees And Other Expenses
Expenses |
Annual Cost (GBP) |
International Tuition Fee (Undergraduate) |
19,800 per year |
International Tuition Fee (Postgraduate) |
16,380 per year |
Student fee (full-time) |
650 |
Student Healthcare Plan |
202 |
Orientation |
160 |
Books and stationery |
1,300 |
Residence |
3,800 |
Food |
3,170 |
Living expenses |
1,000 |
UK Visa and Immigration (UKVI) requires students to have a budget of at least £1,265 per month in addition to tuition fees.