Behavioral Neurobiology provides a novel treatment of the neural basis of behavior. The pedagogical premise
of the book is that general insights into the neuronal organization of behavior can be gained by examining neural
solutions that have evolved in animals to solve problems encountered in their particular environmental niches.
Therefore, rather than organizing the chapters around general themes, such as "Motor Systems" or "Learning
and Memory," the author presents in-depth "case studies" of individual animals; themes clearly emerge,
but take on additional meaning by being considered in a real-world behavioral context.
While each chapter focuses on the world of a single animal, chapters are clustered into three major thematic sections:
Sensory Worlds, Motor Strategies, and Behavioral Plasticity. At the end of each section is a "Coda" highlighting
general principles of neuronal organization common to the chapters within it.
In writing the book, Dr. Carew has drawn on his many years of undergraduate teaching at Yale University. Behavioral
Neurobiology does not presume a strong biological background, and is therefore suitable for a general undergraduate
audience. However, the material is treated in sufficient depth to make the book useful for advanced undergraduate
and graduate courses in behavioral neurobiology or neuroethology as well.