<p>Stanford’s ranked top 10 in neuroscience/neurobiology (and as high as #1), and in the top 5 for reputation. Its one of Stanford’s strengths.</p>
<p>[NRC</a> Rankings Overview: Neuroscience and Neurobiology - Faculty - The Chronicle of Higher Education](<a href=“http://chronicle.com/article/NRC-Rankings-Overview-/124747/]NRC”>http://chronicle.com/article/NRC-Rankings-Overview-/124747/)</p>
<p>Princeton is also pretty decent in neuroscience (I have two friends actually doing a PhD in the program there now), but I think Stanford definitely has the advantage here.</p>
<p>While the neuroscience program at Stanford is grad program, you’ll have access to the offerings of the grad program, and there are ways for you to pursue neuroscience as an undergrad.</p>
<p>[Stanford</a> Institute for Neuro-Innovation & Translational Neurosciences - Stanford University School of Medicine](<a href=“http://neuroscience.stanford.edu/]Stanford”>http://neuroscience.stanford.edu/)
[Stanford</a> University Explore Courses](<a href=“http://explorecourses.stanford.edu/CourseSearch/]Stanford”>Stanford University Explore Courses)</p>
<p>(see the departments of neurobiology, neurology, and neurosciences)</p>
<p>These are the courses that you’d be able to take to supplement your curriculum. There are different ways that you can pursue neuroscience in a major–the best, I think, is symbolic systems with a neuroscience concentration</p>
<p>[Symbolic</a> Systems Undergraduate Core](<a href=“Symbolic Systems Program”>Symbolic Systems Program)
[Symbolic</a> Systems Neurosciences Concentration](<a href=“Symbolic Systems Program”>Symbolic Systems Program)</p>
<p>but you can also major in biology, psychology, etc. and focus in neuroscience.</p>