*Postdoctoral Position in *
*Neuromuscular Rehabilitation and Neuroimaging*
*Reference: HPEL01-FSL*
Applications are now being accepted for a Postdoctoral Fellowship
position at the Human Performance and Engineering Lab at Kessler
Foundation in collaboration with New Jersey Medical School of Rutgers
University. The 2-3 year program prepares biomedical scientists,
including engineers (e.g. biomedical, electrical, rehabilitation),
neuroscientists, kinesiologists, and those in related fields, for a
career in rehabilitation research within the specialty area of
neuromuscular rehabilitation. The successful candidate will work
principally on a 5 year NIH funded research study aimed at investigating
the neurophysiological effect of mental and physical training on
mitigating cancer- and/or cancer treatment-related weakness. The
successful applicant will also be expected to develop his/her own
mentored research project as well as have the opportunity to work on
other projects in neuromuscular rehabilitation in diverse patient
populations including traumatic brain injury, multiple sclerosis, spinal
cord injury and stroke. He/she will work on various aspects of research
projects from inception (e.g., study formulation, grant-writing, etc.),
through dissemination (conference presentation and manuscript
publication). Opportunities of collaborating with clinicians on existing
or future clinical research are also available. All fellows participate
in an extensive training curriculum and didactic offerings.
Multidisciplinary mentored training opportunities are individually
tailored to achieve specific goals considering each fellow’s prior
background and interests.
Applicants with specific interests and/or experience in the following
areas are highly encouraged to apply: Neuromuscular rehabilitation;
biomedical signal processing (e.g., EEG, TMS and EMG); brain and muscle
electrophysiology; functional and structural MRI.
Qualified candidates must have an earned doctorate in biomedical
engineering, neuroscience, kinesiology or a related field with a
background in signal processing or/and image processing (EEG, MRI,
fMRI). Working knowledge of at least one programming language is
mandatory. Preferences will be given to candidates with expertise in
Matlab programming as well as image processing software such as EEGLAB,
FSL, AFNI. Strong candidates will have prior experience in performing
research studies in human subjects, as well as some history of
publication and presentation of original research. Additional desirable
skills and experience include: experience with EEG/EMG data collection
and analysis, biomedical instrumentation, ability to independently
develop data processing/analysis methods, knowledge of statistical data
analysis, and excellent written communication skills.
The Kessler Foundation Research Center is a division of Kessler
Foundation, a public charity that advances its mission of improving the
lives of people with disabilities through research and grant-making
programs. The Kessler Foundation Research Center is affiliated with the
renowned Kessler Institute for Rehabilitation in West Orange, New Jersey
and enjoys close collaborations with partners at the New Jersey
Institute of Technology, Rutgers University, Seton Hall University, New
York University, and the University of Delaware. Kessler Foundation is
one of the few rehabilitation institutions in the United States who has
a research dedicated state-of-the-art 3T Siemens MRI system at the Rocco
Ortenzio Neuroimaging Center. This offers unique research opportunities
and training in neuroimaging. Applicants are encouraged to visit the
Foundation website (http://www.kesslerfoundation.org/research/) to learn
about the missions, activities, and resources and its laboratories, in
particular the Human Performance and Engineering Lab.
Administration of the ARRT fellowships occurs under the Department of
Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation at the New Jersey Medical School of
Rutgers University in Newark. As such, fellows enjoy the benefits and
academic resources available to all post-doctoral fellows at the Medical
School. Fellows may also be recommended for an academic appointment at
the rank of Instructor.
Principal Investigator: Dr. Guang Yue, Ph.D.
To apply, please send your CV, a letter of interest to Dr. Jiang at
tjiang(a)kesslerfoundation.org
<mailto:tjiang@kesslerfoundation.org> Please include the reference
number of the position in your application.
APPLICATION DEADLINE: 2/15/2015
We are equal opportunity employers.
We are seeking an enthusiastic, intellectually able and motivated
candidate for a PhD project on the neural prediction of unhealthy eating
in real world contexts. Obesity is at unprecedented levels. Thus,
improved understanding of the neural determinants of eating behaviour is
a pressing need. The project, supervised by Prof. Andrew Lawrence, Dr
Nils Muhlert and Prof. Derek Jones, Cardiff University, UK, will combine
multi-modal functional and structural (white matter) imaging with novel
ecologically valid behavioural measures, to examine how inter-individual
variation in the function and structure of brain reward circuitry
predicts food cravings, patterns of unhealthy eating, and subsequent
weight change.
For related work from the lab see: Lawrence NS et al. Nucleus accumbens
response to food cues predicts subsequent snack consumption in women and
increased body mass index in those with reduced self-control. Neuroimage
2012; 63: 415-22.
Funding Notes:
Studentships will commence in October 2015 and will cover your tuition
fees as well as a maintenance grant (of £13,863 per annum). Additional
funding for research costs and academic conference travel is available.
The MRC Doctoral Training Partnership (DTP) are currently advertising 13
projects across different Schools, but only 4 studentships will be
funded across Cardiff University.
References:
Full awards (fees plus maintenance stipend) are open to UK Nationals,
and EU students who can satisfy UK residency requirements. To be
eligible for the full award, EU Nationals must have been in the UK for
at least 3 years prior to the start of the course for which they are
seeking funding, including for the purposes of full-time education.
As only one studentship is available and a very high standard of
applications is typically received, the successful applicant is likely
to have a very good first degree (a First or Upper Second class BSc
Honours or equivalent) and/or be distinguished by having relevant
research experience.
Application deadline:
30th January 2015 with interviews (either in person or by Skype)
being held on or around 9th February 2015 and decisions being made by
Friday 20th February 2015.
General Information:
The School of Psychology is one of the largest and most successful in the UK
(http://www.cf.ac.uk/psych/). The School’s excellent standard of
research and teaching has
been recognised in every Research Assessment Exercise. It has its own
brain-imaging centre
(http://www.cf.ac.uk/psych/cubric/), enhancing the international-leading
research in
cognitive and behavioural neuroscience, cognitive ergonomics, forensic,
social and
developmental psychology.
Further particulars, including application forms, can be found online at:
http://psych.cf.ac.uk/degreeprogrammes/postgraduate/research/specificprojec…
or here:
http://www.findaphd.com/search/ProjectDetails.aspx?PJID=59865
Andrew Lawrence
Professor Andrew Lawrence PhD
School of Psychology
Cardiff University
Tower Building, 70 Park Place
Cardiff CF10 3AT
Email: LawrenceAD(a)Cardiff.ac.uk
http://psych.cf.ac.uk/http://www.cardiff.ac.uk/research/neuroscience-mental-health
The new research group /Multimodal Imaging of Neuronal Networks/ at the
University of Cologne is inviting applications for the following
positions (starting 2015):
1 Post-doctoral Research Associate for 5 years (reference “5Post”)
1 Post-Doctoral Research Associate for 3 years (reference “3Post”)
1 PhD position for 3 years (reference “PhD”)
Our research group investigates in two main research topics:
A) Imaging Biomarkers of Neurodegeneration and Cognitive Ageing
B) Dopaminergic Functions and Decision Making
We are located at the Department of Nuclear Medicine of the University
Hospital Cologne and at the Jülich Research Centre. Thilo van Eimeren
(head of the group) is also senior physician at the Department of
Neurology of the University Hospital Cologne. We primarily use
functional and structural MRI, as well as ligand PET imaging and have
access to various state-of-the-art PET and MRI scanners, including high
field (3T) and ultra high field (9.4T) hybrid MR-PET. We are part of a
strong interdisciplinary and international neuroscience community with a
strong emphasis on the promotion of young scientists.
5Post job description:
You are applying for a long-term position within the group. You should
have a PhD in neuroscience, medicine, physics, computer science,
psychology or a related field. You should be knowledgeable in
programming (e.g. Matlab) and statistical data analysis, and have good
writing skills and proficiency in English. Experience in brain mapping
methods is a plus. You will be engaged in both main research topics,
with an emphasis on topic A. Importantly, you will supervise students
working in our lab.
3Post job description:
You are applying for a position dedicated to research topic B,
specifically to the research project “Neuronal basis of impaired
motivation and inhibition of actions in patients with Parkinson's
disease and behavioural addictions.”, which is funded by the German
Research Foundation (DFG) and encompasses pharmacologically modulated
fMRI to explore the role of dopamine in behavioural additions (e.g.,
pathological gambling, compulsive shopping, binge eating,
hypersexuality). You should have an MD or PhD in neuroscience, medicine,
physics, computer science, psychology or a related field. You should be
experienced with fMRI study designs and analytical methods, and have
good writing skills and proficiency in English. Proficiency in German
and experience with patient studies (particularly Parkinson's patients)
are a plus.
PhD job description:
You are applying for a PhD fellowship position focused on research theme
A. You should hold a Masters or Diploma in Cognitive Neuroscience,
Neurophysiology, Psychology, Computer Science, Physics, Statistics or a
related field. Mathematical and programming skills, experience in
experimental design, analysis of fMRI data, good writing skills and
proficiency in English are a plus.
Cologne is a vibrant city that celebrates diversity. It is best known
for its rich history (founded 2000 years ago), the famous Cologne
Cathedral and the Cologne Carnival.
Established in 1388, the University of Cologne is among the leading
universities in Germany and was awarded in the current governmental
German Universities Excellence Initiative for its overall concept.
If you are interested, please send an email to tvaneimeren(at)gmail.com
<http://gmail.com/>
The subject line should only contain the reference (“5Post”,”3Post”, or
“PhD”). Please attach a full current CV and a cover letter describing
your background, motivation and research interests.
Salary is according to the German TV-L (E13), all position are available
starting February 2015 and will be open until filled.
For informal enquiries about the positions please also contact
tvaneimeren(at)gmail.com <http://gmail.com/>
The Sir Peter Mansfield Magnetic Resonance Centre, University of
Nottingham is seeking to recruit two Research Associate/Fellows in the
field of magnetoencephalography (MEG). Successful candidates will work
on developing and applying novel ways to measure and understand the
intrinsic modes of functional coupling between functionally specific
brain regions. Specifically, areas of development will include: i) New
ways to model neural oscillations in local circuits; ii) Novel methods
to characterize long range linear and non-linear coupling and iii)
Measurement of dynamic changes in functional connectivity during basic
sensory and cognitive tasks. In addition, since electrophysiological
activity and connectivity is mediated by neurochemistry, successful
candidates will also be involved in performing parallel ultra-high field
(7T) magnetic resonance spectroscopy (^1 H and ^13 C) experiments in
order to relate the concentration of cortical neurotransmitters
(glutamate/GABA) to electrophysiological metrics in MEG. Finally these
metrics will be applied in schizophrenia in order to gain new insight
into how impaired network activity and connectivity underlies core symptoms.
The University of Nottingham has been at the forefront of imaging since
the introduction of MRI in the 1970’s. Indeed a rich history of novel
developments resulted in the award of a Nobel Prize to Sir Peter
Mansfield in 2003. The Sir Peter Mansfield Magnetic Resonance Centre
(SPMMRC), now headed by Prof. Peter Morris, remains at the forefront of
neuroimaging development with significant contributions in the fields of
MRI, MEG, multi-modal imaging, and simultaneous EEG/fMRI. The Centre is
equipped with a 275 channel MEG, 7T, 3T and 1.5T MR systems as well as
MR compatible 64 channel EEG. In addition, a £9m investment by the
Medical Research Council (announced in October 2014) will see upgrades
to 7T and MEG as well as the introduction of wide bore 3T and upright
MRI systems, to begin in 2015.
Candidates should have a PhD (or equivalent) or be nearing completion in
neuroimaging and strong interest/experience in developing methods plus
an undergraduate degree in Physics, Engineering, Mathematics or
appropriately related discipline.
There are two fixed term posts available, one for two years and one for
three years duration from 1 January 2015.
Applications can be made at:
http://jobs.nottingham.ac.uk/Vacancy.aspx?id=3148&forced=1
Closing Date: 10^th December 2014
Informal enquiries may be addressed to Dr Matt Brookes, tel: 0115
9515188 or email matthew.brookes(a)nottingham.ac.uk
<mailto:matthew.brookes@nottingham.ac.uk>.
Please note that applications sent directly to this email address will
not be accepted.
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The UCLA Department of Psychiatry and Biobehavioral Sciences is
recruiting for a Postdoctoral research position in Los Angeles, CA. The
candidate will participate in a neuroimaging study of the effects of
exercise and the effects on neural circuitry in Parkinson’s Disease.
Candiate
- Ph.D. degree in neuroscience, psychology, biomedical engineering or
related fields. Alternatively, we will consider M.D. candidates having
completed residency training in Neurology or Psychiatry or prior to
residency training, with a demonstrated interest and track record in
neuroimaging research.
- Research training in translational, clinical and/or neuroimaging
research in Parkinson’s Disease research. They should have an interest
in the basic mechanisms of disease pathogenesis and interventional studies.
Experience
- fMRI data collection and analysis is required
- solid background in the principles of MRI and fMRI and have had
experience in clinical and translation MRI research and development
- analytical skills in the programming language needed for fMRI task
design (i.e. Matlab, Presentation)
- experience with fMRI analyses software (i.e. FSL)
The Fellowship will be supervised by Dr. McEwen (UCLA) and Dr. Petzinger
(Department of Neurology, USC) and the candidate will be responsible for
MRI data acquisition, processing, analysis, and contribute to the
preparation of manuscripts.
This Fellowship offers an outstanding training environment, in which the
successful candidate will be contributing to ground-breaking
translational research in the field of Parkinson’s Disease and
neuroplasticity research. This position does not have patient care
responsibilities.
The position will begin January/February 2015 and we are looking for a 2
year commitment.
Interested applicants should send curriculum vitae, a statement of
research interests and three letters of recommendation to Dr. Sarah
McEwen (smcewen(a)mednet.ucla.edu).
Postdoctoral Position in Decision Neuroscience in Berlin
Applications are invited for a postdoctoral position in the Heekeren lab
at Freie Universität Berlin (http://fu-berlin.de/scan).
Projects in the lab examine mechanisms of perceptual, reward-based and
social decision making using neurocognitive
methods (fMRI, EEG, TMS) in combination with computational modeling.
Freie Universität Berlin provides full access to outstanding
infrastructure, including MRI, EEG, TMS, and eye-tracking.Duties and
Responsibilities: The
successful candidate will carry out research in the area of decision
neuroscience using a model-based
cognitive neuroscience approach.
The successful candidate should have a reasonable subset of the following:
- a PhD in cognitive or Computational neuroscience, engineering,
psychology, experimental economics, or a related field.
- Knowledge of decision neuroscience, cognitive neuroscience,
computational neuroscience, or behavioural economics.
- Experience in statistics or machine learning.
- Experience in the analysis of behavioural and functional neuroimaging
data.
- Programming skills in MATLAB or similar languages.
- Effective written and verbal communication skills.
- Experience working in a research environment.
Consideration of applications will begin immediately and will end when
the positions are filled.
If interested, send a CV and a brief cover letter to Hauke Heekeren
hauke.heekeren(a)fu-berlin.de
We are inviting applications for 9 fully funded PhD studentships in the following interdisciplinary areas: biology, cognitive neurology, cognitive science, and psychology. Faculty and research projects:
Florian Hutzler: i) Reverse inference in functional connectivity studies
ii) Connectivity during natural reading in ecologically valid settings (fixation-related BOLD)
Eva Jonas: i) Experiencing threat: Social-cognitive, neural, affective, and motivational perspectives
ii) Managing threat: Social-cognitive, neural, affective, and motivational perspectives
Wolfgang Klimesch: i)Temporal attention, alpha phase and slow oscillations
ii) Memory capacity and the inhibition of distracting information
Martin Kronbichler: i) Examining brain connectivity abnormalities in mental disorders
ii) Brain connectvity and individual differences in cognitive abilities
Josef Perner: i) Brain imaging counterfactual thinking and emotions
ii) Tracking brain processes underlying identity statements and theory of mind
Belinda Pletzer: i) Sex hormone influences on brain connectivity and higher cognitive functions
ii) Sex hormone influences on inter-hemispheric connectivity and global-local processing
Manuel Schabus: i) Consolidation of motor skills during sleep
ii) Sleep and residual cognitive processing in disorders of consciousness
Eugen Trinka: i) Emotion recognition and social cognition in juvenile myoclonic epilepsy
ii) Memory in lesional drug resistant mesial temporal lobe epilepsy
Frank Wilhelm: i) Neural processes underlying intrusive memory formation in PTSD
ii) Dieting, thought control, and fronto-limbic connectivity: New hope for obesity?
The program will admit students for the upcoming semester (1st March 2015) or winter semester (1st October 2015) and offers numerous benefits to its students: salary for a period of 3 to 4 years (including health and social insurance), equipped work space, cover of research consumables, specific technological training courses (e.g. fMRI, EEG), presentation, writing and teaching skill training, full funding of congress participation, workshops and international courses, including stays in foreign partner laboratories.
Candidates must hold a master’s degree or equivalent with a relevant specialization in one of the above listed academic areas of the programme at the time of entry. Prior application is possible. The language of the graduate programme (teaching) is English; hence English proficiency is indispensable. The programme strives for equal representation of female PhD students so women are especially encouraged to apply.
Deadline for applications: 6th January 2015
For detailed information about application, selection, admission procedure, and about the scientific pro-gram and faculty visit: http://www.uni-salzburg.at/phdim/application
*Postdoctoral Position in*
*Neuromuscular Rehabilitation and Neuroimaging*
*Reference: HPEL01-FSL*
Applications are now being accepted for a Postdoctoral Fellowship
position at the Human Performance and Engineering Lab at Kessler
Foundation in collaboration with New Jersey Medical School of Rutgers
University. The 2-3 year program prepares biomedical scientists,
including engineers (e.g. biomedical, electrical, rehabilitation),
neuroscientists, kinesiologists, and those in related fields, for a
career in rehabilitation research within the specialty area of
neuromuscular rehabilitation. The successful candidate will work
principally on a 5 year NIH funded research study aimed at investigating
the neurophysiological effect of mental and physical training on
mitigating cancer- and/or cancer treatment-related weakness. The
successful applicant will also be expected to develop his/her own
mentored research project as well as have the opportunity to work on
other projects in neuromuscular rehabilitation in diverse patient
populations including traumatic brain injury, multiple sclerosis, spinal
cord injury and stroke. He/she will work on various aspects of research
projects from inception (e.g., study formulation, grant-writing, etc.),
through dissemination (conference presentation and manuscript
publication). Opportunities of collaborating with clinicians on existing
or future clinical research are also available. All fellows participate
in an extensive training curriculum and didactic offerings.
Multidisciplinary mentored training opportunities are individually
tailored to achieve specific goals considering each fellow’s prior
background and interests.
Applicants with specific interests and/or experience in the following
areas are highly encouraged to apply: Neuromuscular rehabilitation;
biomedical signal processing (e.g., EEG, TMS and EMG); brain and muscle
electrophysiology; functional and structural MRI.
Qualified candidates must have an earned doctorate in biomedical
engineering, neuroscience, kinesiology or a related field with a
background in signal processing or/and image processing (EEG, MRI,
fMRI). Working knowledge of at least one programming language is
mandatory. Preferences will be given to candidates with expertise in
Matlab programming as well as image processing software such as EEGLAB,
FSL, AFNI. Strong candidates will have prior experience in performing
research studies in human subjects, as well as some history of
publication and presentation of original research. Additional desirable
skills and experience include: experience with EEG/EMG data collection
and analysis, biomedical instrumentation, ability to independently
develop data processing/analysis methods, knowledge of statistical data
analysis, and excellent written communication skills.
The Kessler Foundation Research Center is a division of Kessler
Foundation, a public charity that advances its mission of improving the
lives of people with disabilities through research and grant-making
programs. The Kessler Foundation Research Center is affiliated with the
renowned Kessler Institute for Rehabilitation in West Orange, New Jersey
and enjoys close collaborations with partners at the New Jersey
Institute of Technology, Rutgers University, Seton Hall University, New
York University, and the University of Delaware. Kessler Foundation is
one of the few rehabilitation institutions in the United States who has
a research dedicated state-of-the-art 3T Siemens MRI system at the Rocco
Ortenzio Neuroimaging Center. This offers unique research opportunities
and training in neuroimaging. Applicants are encouraged to visit the
Foundation website (http://www.kesslerfoundation.org/research/) to learn
about the missions, activities, and resources and its laboratories, in
particular the Human Performance and Engineering Lab.
Administration of the ARRT fellowships occurs under the Department of
Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation at the New Jersey Medical School of
Rutgers University in Newark. As such, fellows enjoy the benefits and
academic resources available to all post-doctoral fellows at the Medical
School. Fellows may also be recommended for an academic appointment at
the rank of Instructor.
To apply, please send your CV, a letter of interest, and three letters
of reference to Dr. Guang Yue at gyue(a)kesslerfoundation.org
<mailto:gyue@kesslerfoundation.org>. Please include the reference number
of the position in your application.
APPLICATION DEADLINE: 2/15/2015
We are equal opportunity employers.
We have an PhD position available at the ISVR, Southampton:
ISVR-HABC-114: Optimizing the detection of cortical auditory evoked
potentials in hearing aid fitting verification
See http://www.findaphd.com/search/ProjectDetails.aspx?PJID=59050 for
details.
Hearing aids are now routinely fitted to infants as young as 6 weeks of
age, following hearing screening. After fitting it is desirable to test
whether the infant has access to auditory input, but before the age of
6-8 months it is not possible to carry out conventional clinical tests.
In patients with dementia or learning difficulties, there are similar
challenges. There is growing clinical interest in using Cortical
Auditory Evoked Potential (CAEP) to address this. CAEPs are obtained by
recording the electrical signals from the brain (EEG signals, recorded
by electrodes on the scalp) during auditory stimulation. Through
appropriate signal processing methods, the specific responses to the
stimuli can be extracted. The current project will extend our previous
work in this area by developing, testing and optimizing signal
processing and statistical methods to detect the presence of CAEPs in
the recorded signals, using data from healthy adults and small groups of
patients (obtained with the assistance of clinical audiologists).
Successful applicants will have to demonstrate good knowledge of signal
processing and statistics. While prior knowledge of audiology or evoked
potentials is not required, some practical experience with biomedical
applications of signal processing will be a distinct advantage.
ISVR has one of the UKs leading academic groups in audiology, with
undergraduate, MSc and PhD programmes training professionals for
clinical and research environments. The project will be supervised by
Prof. David Simpson and Dr. Steven Bell, who have a background in
biomedical signal processing and audiology, respectively. The work will
be carried out in collaboration with industry with co-supervision from
Dr. James Harte (Interacoustics Research Unit, Copenhagen, Denmark).
Funding support comes from the Oticon Foundation (Denmark), and the
project is expected to include a short stay (approximately 3 months) in
Copenhagen. Funding covers living costs and home/EU (not overseas)
student fees.
If you wish to discuss any details of the project informally, please
contact Prof. David Simpson, Human Sciences Group, ISVR,
Email:ds@isvr.soton.ac.uk
<http://www.findaphd.com/search/EmailEnquiry.aspx?fapjid=59050&LID=1427&EA=d…>
Tel:
+44 (0) 2380 59 3221, or Dr. Steven Bell, Human Sciences Group, ISVR,
Email: slb(a)soton.ac.uk
<http://www.findaphd.com/search/EmailEnquiry.aspx?fapjid=59050&LID=1427&EA=s…>
Tel:
+44 (0) 2380 59 4950
--
Dr. Stefan Bleeck, Associate Professor
Hearing and Balance Centre, Institute of Sound and Vibration Research,
Faculty of Engineering and the Environment, University of Southampton,
SO17 1BJ, UK
Room 4093, Tizard Building (13), bleeck(a)gmail.com
<mailto:bleeck@gmail.com> Tel.: 02380 596682
Dear Users
This afternoon (from 4 pm in B020) Richard Vernon will give a new
project presentation talk on the "Use of Fourier descriptors to assess
shape processing in the LOC".
Everyone is welcome to attend and refreshments will be served afterwards.
This is the last seminar of the year.
Gary
--
---------------
Gary Green
York Neuroimaging Centre &
Centre for Hyperpolarisation in Magnetic Resonance
The Biocentre
York Science Park
Innovation Way
Heslington
York
YO10 5NY
tel +44 (0) 1904 435349
fax +44 (0) 1904 435356
mobile +44 (0) 788 191 3004
http://www.ynic.york.ac.ukhttp://www.york.ac.uk/chym/https://www.ynic.york.ac.uk/about-us/people/ggrg
PA : Jill Hurst
tel +44 (0) 1904 435329
fax +44 (0) 1904 435356
Jill.Hurst(a)ynic.york.ac.uk