FYI
-----------------------------------
Three brain imaging PhD projects are available at the Sleep & Cognition
group of the Netherlands Institute for Neuroscience in Amsterdam, The
Netherlands. Projects are in collaboration with one or more partners in
Freiburg, Basel or Strasbourg.
*
*
*Project 8: Individual differences in the spatiotemporal profile of
brain activity during wake and sleep*
The project aims to elucidate how spatiotemporal profiles of brain
activity develop from wakefulness to deep sleep. Assessments in good and
poor sleepers will be done using the EGI MR-compatible 256-channel high
density EEG-system in the quietest 3T MRI system presently available, a
Toshiba Vantage Titan 3T with the Pianissimo technology. Analyses
include graph theoretical and network complexity measures. Assessments
will be made in Amsterdam, analyses both in Amsterdam, Freiburg and Basel.*
*
*
*
*Project 6: Spatiotemporal patterns of cortical oscillations that
determine subjective wake time during sleep*
The project aims to elucidate the neural correlates of the loss of
consciousness during sleep. Spatiotemporal profiles of brain activity in
good and poor sleepers will be obtained using the EGI 256-channel high
density EEG-system, both during unperturbed sleep and in response to
sensory stimulation. Analyses include graph theoretical and network
complexity measures. Assessments will be made in Amsterdam, analyses
both in Amsterdam and Freiburg.
*
*
*Project 4: Reward effects of light: phototherapy as a treatment for
pathologies with motivational deficits*
The project aims to elucidate the involvement of brain regions
regulating reward and motivation in the mood-improving effects of bright
light. 3T MRI assessments will be done in good and poor sleepers.
Assessments of behavior, circadian genes, proteins, neurotransmitters
and hormones will be done in transgenic animals. Human studies will be
performed in Amsterdam, animal studies in Strasbourg.
Projects are open to students with a (pending) master (or equivalent)
degree in Physics, Mathematics, Biology, Psychology, Neuroscience or
Engineering or comparable. Experience with brain imaging, EEG, or sleep
is an advantage for all projects. Experience with animal studies is an
advantage for project 4. Especially students with some affinity with
and/or background in mathematics and/or scientific programming are also
encouraged to apply. A proficient level of familiarity with large
datasets and programming is commendable, e.g. using Matlab. Mastery of
the English language is essential for writing papers and a thesis;
mastery of the local languages will facilitate recordings.
If you're interested, please read additional information on
http://www.neurotime-erasmus.org/ and contact e.van.someren(a)nin.knaw.nl
<mailto:e.van.someren@nin.knaw.nl>.
Thank you for your interest!
Prof. dr. Eus J.W. Van Someren
http://www.nin.knaw.nl/research_groups/van_someren_group/
Dear All,
I’d like to draw your attention to the forthcoming meeting of the British
Neuropsychological Society (BNS) on 7-8 November in Queen Square, London.
Presentations at the BNS are comprised of a diverse range of topics and
methodologies (not limited to patient-based studies) by some of the leading
researchers. They are relevant to all those with an interest in the brain
and cognition. Highlights of the forthcoming meeting include:
*“Frontotemporal Dementia: From Modules to Molecules”*
*John Hodges* (University of New South Wales, Australia) will deliver the
Freda Newcombe Lecture
*“Medial Temporal Lobe Functional Heterogeneity: Inputs or Processes?”*
*Kim Graham* (Cardiff University) & *Daniela Montaldi* (University of
Manchester) will participate in The John Marshall Memorial Debate
*"Metacognitive aspects of Alzheimer's disease"*
*Daniel Mograbi*, *Robin Morris *(Institute of Psychiatry, London) and *Andrew
Budson *(Boston University, USA).
The full program can be found here: http://www.the-bns.org/meetings.html
One advantage of the BNS is that it is virtually free to attend (and is
indeed free to attend if you opt to become a member): £10 for student
non-members and £20 for other non-members if you register before 20th October
(http://www.the-bns.org/registration.html)
We look forward to seeing you there,
Jamie Ward
BNS Meetings Secretary
--
Beth Jefferies
Department of Psychology, University of York
+44 01904 631585
FYI
=================================================================================================================================
*/_MEG Physicist Position Vacant_/*
*_MEG Lab Overview_*
* *
Our MEG lab is a section of the Neurophysiology Department, which
belongs to National Neuroscience Institute (NNI) which is one of the
most important health care providers at King Fahad Medical City (KFMC).
Our hospital is founded by the Ministry of Health (MOH). The lab was
established in early 2011, and was running officially, by October 2011.
Our MEG system is 306 sensors Neuromag System (Elekta, Helsinki,
Finland). The lab conducts clinical applications for pre-surgical
epilepsy evaluation and brain mapping. Our aim to have high standard
scientific and clinical research, to be one of the labs that contribute
in developing MEG systems, and became a reference for other labs in the
region of Middle East.
* *
*_Requirements_*
Required applicant should have a minimal of Master's degree (or
equivalent), have academic experience in using numerical methods to
analyse complex systems, and be willing to do further development for
mathematical and software programs.
Preferable to have strong motivations and ambitions to take part in the
research. Also, researchers having interest in neural and human science
with expertise in different areas are such as Statistics, machine
learning, parallel distributed computing, signal processing, artificial
intelligence, bio-measurement and instrumentation, computer vision,
statistical physics, cognitive psychology.
Preferable to have enthusiastic to understand the dynamic properties of
the human brain and to probe the interaction between different regions.
Furthermore, you are prepared to take courses and workshops offered
based on the lab requirement.
Proficiency in oral and written English is essential. You are expected
to work in a team, sharing technical know-how and ideas.
Most pass the personal interview (Hospital may organize overseas trip
interview serious applicant only).
*_Conditions of Employment_*
*Position: *Full-time Researcher / Full-time Research physicist*
Tenure: *Single year based contract, renewable based on evaluation
*Salary: *Based on experience and negotiable*
Work Location: *Riyadh, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia*
**
**_Application Materials
_1- CV
2- List of publications
3- Copy of the passport
4- Recommendation letters from three researchers*
*_Starting Date
_October 1^st 2012 *
*_Deadline _*
*Opens until positions are filled (first come, first served)*
* *
*_Contact_*
*/Dr. SALAH ALMUBARAK, /**/BSc, MD, FRCPC
Head Section of MEG lab/*
*/Clinical Neurophysiology Department
National Neuroscience Institute
King Fahad Medical City
Riyadh, Saudi Arabia/*
*/saalmubarak(a)kfmc.med.sa <mailto:saalmubarak@kfmc.med.sa>/*
*/drsalmubarak(a)gmail.com <mailto:drsalmubarak@gmail.com> /*
*/Tel +966 1 288 9999 Ex. 7476
Fax +966 1 288 _9000_ Ex. 7476/*
*/Cell +966 569557313/*
* *
*
===========================================================================================================================*
* *
* *
Hi everyone,
It is great to see how more and more people in the Department are
getting excited about the possibilities of using MEG to tackle numerous
unanswered questions from their own field of research. This development
has led to the idea of creating a forum where MEG researchers or those
who are interested in the methods get the opportunity to a) discuss
methodological advances/issues in the field, and b) get feedback on
ongoing projects in the Department.
Therefore, I am very pleased to invite all of you who are using MEG, or
planning to use it in the future to our first meeting, this Thursday
(04-10-12), at 12.00 in the Deparment of Psychology (C003). Please feel
free to bring lunch and coffee.
The meeting will take about 1h. During the first half, Catarina Teige
has kindly agreed to present some very preliminary results from her
study on semantic cognition. In the second half, we will discuss the
form of the next couple of meetings. In particular, I would like to get
an impression on what topics you are interested in and how we can make
these meetings interesting for every one of you.
I hope to see you during our first meeting.
With best wishes,
Markus
fyi
---------------------------------
A post-doctoral position is available to work on brain-body interactions
in visual consciousness and cognition, in the Visual Cognition group
visualcognition.ens.fr <http://visualcognition.ens.fr/> led by Catherine
Tallon-Baudry, Cognitive Neuroscience Lab, Department of Cognitive
Science, Ecole Normale Supérieure, Paris. The project aims at testing
whether and how interoceptive and perceptual signals interact to
generate subjective experience. It involves recording neural activity
(MEG, EEG, fMRI) and various bodily measures.
Applicants should have a strong background in cognitive neuroscience.
Fluent English & Matlab are mandatory. Prior experience in
electrophysiology would be valuable. French speaking is not a
requirement. Starting date is January 2013 or later, with an initial
appointment of 1 year, renewable. Applications will be considered until
the position is filled.
Applicants should send a CV, publication list, letter of intent with a
statement of research interest, and the name and contact of two
references to catherine.tallon-baudry(a)ens.fr
<mailto:catherine.tallon-baudry@ens.fr>. Informal enquiry by email is
welcome.
FYI
-------- Original Message --------
Could you please post the attached job for a MEG Post-Doc at University
of Arkansas for Medical Sciences. - Thanks
Hari Eswaran PhD
Scientific Director FMEG -- SARA
UAMS, Little Rock, 72205
*University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences*
*Post-Doctoral Research Position*
We are searching for a postdoctoral researcher with training in digital
signal processing and time series analysis. The extremely weak
biomagnetic fields generated in the brain of the human fetus can now be
measured utilizing Superconducting QUantum Interference Device (SQUID)
technology. The SQUID Array for Reproductive Assessment (SARA) was
developed to apply SQUID technology to the measurement of physiological
parameters from fetuses, mothers and newborns. The data that is
recorded includes fetal Magnetoencephalography (MEG,) fetal
Magnetocardiography (MCG) an uterine Magnetomyography (MMG). The SARA
instrument is a unique world-class instrument installed in the SARA
Research Center at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences,
Little Rock, Arkansas. (http://obgyn.uams.edu/researchcenters).
Applicants are expected to work in close collaboration with graduate
students and members of the SARA-team and collaborators at our sister
institution, the University of Arkansas at Little Rock (UALR) to develop
new study protocols, perform data analysis and develop new analytical
approaches. Areas under investigation include independent component
analysis, spatial time series analysis, fractal behavior, and 3D
modeling and mapping. Requirements: A PhD (or near completion) in
engineering, physics, computer science, neurosciences or a related field
and excellent knowledge of signal analysis and modeling. Ability to
program and use MATLAB is required. The position is available initially
for two years. Salary is commensurate with experience. Review of
applications will begin immediately. Applications including CV and a
list of publications should be submitted by email to: Hari Eswaran PhD
(saracenter(a)uams.edu <mailto:saracenter@uams.edu>).
The University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences is an affirmative
action, equal opportunity employer and actively seeks the candidacy of
minorities, women and persons with disabilities. Under Arkansas law all
applications are subject to disclosure. Person hired must have proof or
legal authority to work in the United States.
FYI
---------
The Department of Applied Neurocognitive Psychology at Oldenburg
University, Germany, offers a
*Post-doctoral position (E13/TVL, 3 years plus) *
and a
*PhD position (0.5*E13/TVL, initially 2 years)*
The lab focuses on the fields of neural coding of complex movements and
neural coding of speech in the human brain with the aim of developing
brain-machine-interfaces.
To extend our interdisciplinary team we seek for highly motivated
candidates with strong quantitative and experimental skills. The
post-doctoral position requires a PhD or comparable degree and the PhD
position requires a masters or comparable degree. The post-doctoral
position is initially limited to three years after with an option for an
extension to obtain habilitation (post-doctoral degree, similar to a
lecturer qualification). Successful candidates will perform cutting edge
research in one of the lab's foci and should have a background in one or
more of the following fields: non-invasive or invasive human
neurophysiology of the motor or auditory system, statistical learning,
brain-machine-interfacing. The positions offer an excellent
interdisciplinary working environment with opportunities for
international exchange. The lab is involved in the EU-project BRACOG
(brain controlled grasping) and we have a close collaboration with UC
Berkeley, USA. The University of Oldenburg was recently awarded a
Cluster of Excellence in hearing research. The Dept. of Psychology will
offer an attractive scientific environment with access to research
dedicated state-of-the-art approaches to human neurophysiological
techniques (fMRI, NIRS, EEG, ECoG, and MEG).
Electronic applications are preferred and can be send to:
Professor Dr. Jochem Rieger: Jochem.rieger(a)uni-oldenburg.de
<mailto:Jochem.rieger@uni-oldenburg.de>
Please send paper applications until September 30^th 2012 to:
Margrit Jung
Dept. of Applied Neurocognitive Psychology
Institute of Psychology
Oldenburg University
26111 Oldenburg
Germany
Applications should include your CV and a list of most recent
publications. Applications for the post-doctoral position should include
a research statement (max. 3 pages). The University of Oldenburg aims to
employ more women in this area and therefore particularly welcomes
applications from women. We also welcome applications from disabled persons.
--
Prof. Dr. rer. nat. Jochem Rieger
Applied Neurocognitive Knight Lab
Psychology Helen Wills Neuroscience Institute
Faculty V University of California
Carl-von-Ossietzky University 132 Barker Hall
26111 Oldenburg Berkeley, CA 94720-3192
Germany USA
Phone: +49(0)4417984533
Fax: +49(0)4417983865
FYI
A 3-year PhD studentship is available in the School of Psychology at Bangor University commencing in January 2013. A highly-motivated and creative student with strong written and oral communication skills, and preferably experience with human neuroscience techniques (fMRI, TMS, EEG) is required for this position. The project is part of ongoing research in the Social Brain in Action Laboratory (SoBA Lab), which explores the cognitive and brain systems that underpin our ability to understand the actions and mental states of other people.
Project description
Appreciating the meaning of social interactions depends crucially on understanding others’ identity. To date, neuroimaging studies have examined separately how we perceive features of other people, such as their bodies, beliefs and attitudes. As such, it is not known how multiple features of a person are integrated in the brain to form a holistic understanding of a person’s identity. The aim of the current project is to use fMRI and connectivity analyses (e.g., PPI, DCM or Granger) to measure the influence of distinct brain regions on each other during social perception. By doing so, the project will build a more coherent picture of how multiple brain circuits interact when we make sense other people’s behaviour (for further discussion see Ramsey, van Schie& Cross, 2011, Cognitive Neuroscience).
SoBA Lab
The SoBA Lab is an international research group housed in the School of Psychology at Bangor University, which offers access to outstanding facilities for Social / Cognitive Neuroscience. Furthermore, Bangor is situated in a beautiful region of North Wales close to Snowdonia National Park, which provides a wonderful natural backdrop to professional activities.
Informal enquiries regarding the PhD position can be directed to Richard Ramsey (r.ramsey [at] bangor.ac.uk) and further information about the SoBA Lab is available at: www.soba-lab.com. Guidelines for formal applications will be published in due course.
----------------------------------
Richard Ramsey, PhD
Lecturer
School of Psychology
Wales Institute of Cognitive
Neuroscience (WICN)
Bangor University
Bangor, Gwynedd
LL57 2AS, UK
FYI
The UCLA Department of Psychology announces a Tenure-Track faculty
position in behavioral neuroscience. The rank for the appointment is
open, but candidates at the Assistant Professor level are preferred.
Broadly speaking, we are interested in candidates who apply the
perspectives and techniques of neuroscience to psychological questions
in humans and/or animals. The specific area of research is open. Among
the areas that would be of interest and would complement our
department's existing strengths are neuroscience of emotion and
motivation, neuro-economics, cognitive neuroscience, and genetic and
epigenetic influences on behavior and psychopathology. The position
entails both undergraduate and graduate teaching responsibilities and
assumes an active research program. Applicants should submit a letter,
curriculum vita, statement of research and teaching interests, relevant
publications, and three letters of recommendation to be sent to
Behavioral Neuroscience Search Committee, (Job #: 0875-1213-02),
Department of Psychology, UCLA, Box 951563, Los Angeles, CA 90095 or
email materials as attachments to bnsfacultysearch(a)psych.ucla.edu
<mailto:bnsfacultysearch@psych.ucla.edu>. Review of applications will
begin November 1, 2012 and will continue until the position is filled.
As a campus with a diverse student body, we encourage applications from
women, minorities, and individuals with a history of mentoring
under-represented minorities. UCLA is an affirmative action/equal
opportunity employer with a strong institutional commitment to achieving
diversity among its faculty, students and staff.
http://www.psych.ucla.edu/employment-opportunities/academic-employment-oppo…
Best regards,
Jesse
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
Jesse Rissman, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor
Department of Psychology,
Department of Psychiatry and Biobehavioral Sciences,
Integrative Center for Learning & Memory,
University of California, Los Angeles
6639 Franz Hall, Box 951563
Los Angeles, CA 90095-1563
(310) 825-4084
http://rissmanlab.psych.ucla.edu
FYI
In collaboration with Frontiers in Neuroscience, we are currently
organizing a Research Topic, "What makes written words so special to the
brain?", and as host editors we think that this topic could be of
interest to some of you.
The proposed structure of this Research Topic is provided below.
Host journal: Frontiers in Human Neuroscience
Research Topic Title: What makes written words so special to the brain?
Topic Editors:
Mohamed L Seghier, UCL, United Kingdom.
Urs Maurer, University of Zurich, Switzerland.
Gui Xue, Beijing Normal University, China.
Description: Reading is an integral part of life in today’s
information-driven societies. Since the pioneering work of Dejerine on
“word blindness” in brain-lesioned patients, the literature has
increased exponentially, from neuropsychological case reports to
mechanistic accounts of word processing at the behavioural,
neurofunctional and computational levels, tapping into diverse aspects
of visual word processing. These studies have revealed some exciting
findings about visual word processing, including how the brain learns to
read, how changes in literacy impact upon word processing strategies,
and whether word processing mechanisms vary across different alphabetic,
logographic or artificial writing systems. Other studies have attempted
to characterise typical and atypical word processes in special
populations in order to explain why dyslexic brains struggle with words,
how multilingualism changes the way our brains see words, and what the
exact developmental signatures are that would shape the acquisition of
reading skills. Exciting new insights have also emerged from recent
studies that have investigated word stimuli at the system/network level,
by looking, for instance, at how the reading system interacts with other
cognitive systems in a context-dependent fashion, how visual language
stimuli are integrated into the speech processing streams, how both left
and right hemispheres cooperate and interact during word processing, and
what the exact contributions of subcortical and cerebellar regions to
reading are.
The goal of this Special Topic is to highlight the latest findings
regarding the different issues mentioned above, particularly how these
findings can explain or model the different processes, mechanisms,
pathways or cognitive strategies by which the human brain sees words,
how they can deepen our understanding of the mechanisms of individual
differences in learning to read and reading development, and how they
can guide the discovery of novel diagnostic tools for reading disorders
and the development of novel interventional approaches. We aim to
collect innovative contributions that shed further light on the
mechanisms of visual word processing. We welcome original research
submissions of any study that used word stimuli in healthy or clinical
populations, children or adults, with behavioral paradigms, structural
(DTI, MRI, lesion mapping), resting and task functional imaging (fMRI,
MEG, EEG), or neuro-stimulation (TMS, tDCS) techniques. We also welcome
critical reviews, meta-analyses, mini-reviews and perspective papers
which offer provocative and insightful interpretations of the recent
literature that challenge current understanding of word processing or
develop novel mechanistic accounts of any aspect of word processing.
Computational modelling studies are also welcome. This special Research
Topic aims to provide a forum for state-of-the-art research in this field.
Article Submission Deadline: Apr 30, 2013
For more details, see:
http://www.frontiersin.org/Human_Neuroscience/researchtopics/What_makes_wri…
We look forward to hearing from you...
With best regards,
Mohamed L Seghier
Urs Maurer
Gui Xue