Best Neurology (Books) for Academic Research (2026)
We ranked titles by author expertise, topical fit for academic research, methodological rigor, citation potential, and relative value for researchers and advanced students
This roundup identifies neurology and neuroscience books suited for academic research, prioritizing methodological depth, evidence transparency, and interdisciplinary relevance. Picks were chosen by evaluating authors' expertise, topical focus (e.g., pharmacology, molecular neuroscience, cognitive disorders), peer citations, and value for researchers and advanced students
Top Picks
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1
Buprenorphine Therapy of Opiate Addiction (Forensic Science and Medicine)
A scholarly book on buprenorphine therapy for opiate addiction, within forensic science and medicine. Insight highlights clinical considerations and treatment contexts
- buprenorphine therapy focus
- forensic medicine relevance
- clinical considerations
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2
Molecular Biology of Drug Addiction
A scholarly book exploring molecular mechanisms in drug addiction. Provides detailed insights into neurobiology and addiction pathways. Customer insight: no explicit insights provided
- neurobiology emphasis
- molecular mechanisms
- expert author
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3
Mild Cognitive Impairment (Psychology Press & Routledge Classic Editions)
A scholarly work on mild cognitive impairment with classic perspectives. Includes insights into cognitive aging and related psychology research. AI notes: mixed sentiments in customer feedback
- classic edition by Psychology Press & Routledge
- focus on mild cognitive impairment
- scholarly psychology perspectives
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4
Governing Habits: Treating Alcoholism in the Post-Soviet Clinic
Explores knowledge practices in treating alcoholism within post-Soviet clinics. Key benefit: informative lens on cultures and technologies of care. AI note: customer insight reflects thoughtful engagement with the subject
- cultures of knowledge
- post-Soviet clinical context
- experimental treatment discourse