Call them the Brain Generation - the tens of thousands of college and graduate students working toward degrees in neuroscience, and the high school students who want to join them someday.
They"ve grown up in a time when exciting discoveries about the brain come out every day, fueled by a revolution in scientific tools over their lifetimes. And that has fueled a boom in students choosing to work toward a neuroscience degree.
But even as they study and train, they"re worried about their futures, and whether they"ll get to use their brains to the fullest in a time of tight research funding.
Top senior neuroscientists are concerned, too. That's why a team of them just published recommendations for how neuroscience education must change. This, they say, will keep the discoveries coming while preparing these bright young people for many paths - not just the traditional university research career.
Writing in
Neuron, they present key insights and recommendations that grew out of a fall 2014 workshop held by the Forum on Neuroscience and Nervous System Disorders of the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine.
"This should be the best of times for both the scientists and the field," they write. "The shared task of all the stakeholders - academia, government, industry, scientific societies, foundations and other components of the private and public sectors - is to ensure that we do not kill this hope."
Huda Akil, Ph.D., a University of Michigan Medical School neuroscientist and the paper's corresponding author, reflects on the incredible growth in the field over the past two decades and sees reason for hope, not pessimism, for the new generation.
But, she says, it's up to university programs to adapt to the new reality that more than half their graduates will someday work outside academia, and train them appropriately.
"The number of opportunities is huge, within and outside academic institutions," she says.
"This is a perfect moment for neuroscience in particular, when the field is blossoming and growing with many ideas, tools, approaches and intersections with other fields, and huge interest among young people. It's a perfect recipe for success. The question is how to proceed so we don"t squash that opportunity."