Course Finder

Neuroscience of Fear and Anxiety

Neuroscience of Fear and Anxiety


Neuroscience of Fear and Anxiety

Course change note

This course is currently running as an elective course for the spring 2025 semester. It will begin running as a Core Course from the fall 2025 semester going forward.

View the Core Course.

About this course

Fear and anxiety are related, multifaceted terms that can be explained anatomically, biologically, and psychologically. This course begins by exploring the differences and similarities between these two related experiences while illustrating their causes and effects on an anatomical and functional level. From here, we will explore the physiological, psychological, and evolutionary aspects underpinning them. Several theories and concepts behind unconsciousness, perception, and emotion are introduced in order to facilitate discussions covering fear and anxiety in everyday life, as well as their roles as a components of dysfunctional behaviors.

Syllabus

Fall 2024

Go to syllabus

This is the most recent syllabus for this course

Pre-requisites

One year of biology or one course in either neuroscience, physiological psychology, or biological psychology, all at university level.

Faculty

Bettina Hornbøll Borch

Faculty

Ph.D. (Neuroscience, University of Copenhagen, 2017). M.Sc. (Neurobiology, University of Copenhagen, 2006). B.A. (Biology, University of Copenhagen, 2004). Founder of CogniCation; cognitive communication. Has been conducting neuroscience research for over 10 years, investigating emotion processing in the brain using imaging. With DIS since 2012.

We’ll support you every step of the way.
Do you need advice?