Neuroscience
Understanding how we interpret the world.
It’s a devastating disease that runs through families generation after generation. In Australia, seven people per 100,000 suffer from the genetic brain disorder known as Huntington disease (HD). Scientists have yet to find a cure.
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Monash neuroscientists are uncovering the secrets of how the nervous system allows us to interact with the surrounding environment, as well as how the brain communicates with and controls the tissues and organs of the body.
This research allows us to combat infertility, obesity, diabetes, blindness, deafness, stroke and memory loss.
By understanding how cells in different parts of the nervous system interact through chemical and electrical signals, our research is revealing how the nervous system works at the basic level.
Our scientists are breaking new ground in understanding how the brain regulates food intake and weight gain, how our hearing and vision work, and the processes of memory.
We are also developing a "bionic eye", a brain implant that could bring sight to up to 80 per cent of clinically blind people
Our researchers and industry partners have access to state-of-the-art facilities, including:
Monash encourages cross discipline collaboration with other research groups, clinical researchers and commercial enterprises to accelerate discovery and invention.
Our partners include: