Neuroscience majors design a course of study that includes work in biology and psychology as well as in neuroscience proper. They have ample opportunities for field work, student-faculty research, and independent study. They develop an analytical style that incorporates a range of theoretical and empirical models--behavioral, evolutionary, social/environmental, physiological, and cellular/molecular. Neuroscience and behavior graduates often attend medical school or graduate school in neuroscience, genetic counseling, clinical psychology, and other related fields.