*The Centre for Cognition & Decision Making*
<http://psy.hse.ru/en/centre>of the Higher School of Economics invites
applications for 2 postdoctoral positions and 2 PhD students’ positions.
The candidate will join new international team of young researchers
studying the brain mechanisms of decision making, social influence and
persuasive communication. We investigate neural mechanism of valuation,
risk taking and social aspects of decision making.
Our group particularly focuses on neurobiological mechanisms of social
influence. People are exposed to hundreds of persuasive messages per day
in one form or another: from TV commercials to scientific publications.
Social influence on our decisions has been a focus of extensive
psychological research but has been nearly ignored by neuroscience.
Understanding the neuronal mechanisms of effective social influence will
help to uncover mechanisms of decision making in various social
contexts. Group leader – Prof. Vasily Klucharev
<http://www.hse.ru/en/org/persons/84236477/person/klucharev/>
The candidate will be encouraged to pursue his/her own research in
parallel with working on the Centre’s research projects under
supervision of. Prof. Klucharev on a broad range of fundamental and
applied problems in decision making and social influence, including
neuroscience of persuasion, cognitive dissonance, neuronal plasticity
caused by economic outcomes, neurobiology of trust and risk taking,
neuroscience of temporal discounting and neuro-law in collaboration with
Laboratoire de Neurosciences Cognitives Ecole Normale Supérieure
<http://www.gnt.ens.fr/people.php?id=2>,University of Basel - Department
of Psychology
<http://psycho.unibas.ch/abteilungen/abteilung-details/home/abteilung/econom…>,
Center for Functionally Integrative Neuroscience, Aarhus University
<http://pure.au.dk/portal/en/persons/id%28647ef703-8140-4df2-810d-32b5395763…>and
Moscow MEG Centre.
*Requirements*:
A candidate for the postdoctoral research position should hold PhD
degree, e.g., in neuroscience, psychology, economics or applied
mathematics. Experience with TMS and/or fMRI and/or MEG/and/or
multi-channel EEG/MEG/ recordings and data analysis is an advantage.
A candidate for the PhD student position should hold MS degree in
neuroscience, psychology, economics, applied mathematics or related
field of science. Experience with TMS and/or fMRI and/or MEG/and/or
multi-channel EEG/MEG/ recordings and data analysis is an advantage.
Appointments will be normally made for one with a possibility to extend
it for two more years.
A CV, research statement and two letters of recommendation should be
sent to moiseeva.victoria(a)gmail.com
<mailto:Moiseeva.victoria@gmail.com>by March 20, 2014.
The HSE is a young, dynamic, fast-growing Russian research university
providing unique research opportunities <http://www.hse.ru/en/science/>.
Best wishes,
Olga
Ph.D. Researcher
Institute of Higher Nervous Activity
and Neurophysiology RAS
+79268365593
Dear Rebecca
Aplogies- am teaching in hospital this week (and was last week)
Best wishes
Avijit
-----Original Message-----
From: ynic-users [mailto:ynic-users-bounces@ynic.york.ac.uk] On Behalf
Of ynic-users-request(a)ynic.york.ac.uk
Sent: 20 February 2014 12:00
To: ynic-users(a)ynic.york.ac.uk
Subject: ynic-users Digest, Vol 91, Issue 16
Send ynic-users mailing list submissions to
ynic-users(a)ynic.york.ac.uk
To subscribe or unsubscribe via the World Wide Web, visit
https://www.ynic.york.ac.uk/mailman/listinfo/ynic-users
or, via email, send a message with subject or body 'help' to
ynic-users-request(a)ynic.york.ac.uk
You can reach the person managing the list at
ynic-users-owner(a)ynic.york.ac.uk
When replying, please edit your Subject line so it is more specific than
"Re: Contents of ynic-users digest..."
Today's Topics:
1. YNiC seminar today (rem)
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Message: 1
Date: Thu, 20 Feb 2014 08:35:56 +0000
From: rem <rem(a)ynic.york.ac.uk>
To: ynic users <ynic-users(a)ynic.york.ac.uk>
Subject: YNiC seminar today
Message-ID: <5305BE6C.7090201(a)ynic.york.ac.uk>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=windows-1252; format=flowed
Dear Users
This afternoon (4.15 pm in YNiC open plan) there will be an internal
project proposal presentation given by Karla Evans. The title of Karla's
talk is "Global image processing".
Abstract:
Experiments have shown that people can rapidly determine if categories
such as ?animal? or ?beach? are present in scenes that are presented for
only a few milliseconds. Typically, observers in these experiments
report on one pre-specified category. My work shows that observers can
rapidly extract information about multiple categories. Moreover, the
findings demonstrate task-dependent interactions between accumulating
information about different categories in a scene that are in some cases
destructive. I believe that the explanation for this destructive
interference is that subjects have learned the spatiotemporal statistics
of the trials, which indicate that single targets are the norm: the
presence of a beach would almost always correlate with the absence of an
animal. My goal is to probe the neuronal correlates of this process to
better understand the mechanism of non-selective gist categorization. In
order to do this I will present a project plan that exploits repetition
attenuation in order study the task-dependent interaction during scene
categorisation.
Everyone is welcome to attend and refreshments will be served
afterwards.
Best wishes
Rebecca
--
************************************************************************
Dr. Rebecca E. Millman
Science Liaison Officer
York Neuroimaging Centre
The Biocentre
York Science Park
Heslington
YO10 5DG
Tel: +44 (0) 1904 567614
Fax: +44 (0) 1904 435356
------------------------------
Subject: Digest Footer
_______________________________________________
ynic-users mailing list
ynic-users(a)ynic.york.ac.uk
https://www.ynic.york.ac.uk/mailman/listinfo/ynic-users
------------------------------
End of ynic-users Digest, Vol 91, Issue 16
******************************************
Dear Users
This Thursday (4.15 pm in YNiC open plan) there will be 2 internal
project proposal presentations:
1) David Watson
"The Role of Image Properties in the Representation of Objects in the
Brain"
The human ventral visual pathway is known to play an important role in
the neural representation of visual objects. Current theories suggest
that the organization of the ventral stream is based upon categorical
principles. For example, there are regions that are selective for faces
and scenes. In this fMRI study we will present images drawn from two
categories (faces or houses) but which have also been manipulated in
terms of image properties by way of low- or high-pass filtering. Using
MVPA we can then directly compare and contrast the relative
contributions of category and image information to neural responses in
face and scene selective regions.
2) Rebecca Millman
"Brain function and dynamics during successful and unsuccessful
understanding of speech in noise"
Sensorineural hearing loss (SNHL) is a natural consequence of ageing.
Background noise is a primary complaint of listeners with SNHL. The
intensity and complexity of everyday environmental noises, such as
background conversations, fluctuates over time. It is thought that young
normal-hearing (NH) listeners can cope with a background noise (a
masker) that varies over time because they are good at “listening in the
dips” of fluctuating noise backgrounds, i.e. whilst the target speech is
momentarily unmasked by the noise. Senescent changes in audition and
cognition may weaken dip listening through a combination of deficits in
peripheral and central auditory processing and higher-level cognitive
systems. This project will use neuroimaging to: 1) disentangle the
relative contributions of some potential cortical auditory and cognitive
deficits to weakened dip listening in SNHL listeners, 2) establish
whether there is a cortical neural marker of successful vs. unsuccessful
dip listening in the presence of a fluctuating masker and 3) determine
whether differences exist in the brain dynamics of NH and SNHL listeners
when they are listening to speech in noisy backgrounds.
Everyone is welcome to attend and refreshments will be served afterwards.
Best wishes
Rebecca
--
************************************************************************
Dr. Rebecca E. Millman
Science Liaison Officer
York Neuroimaging Centre
The Biocentre
York Science Park
Heslington
YO10 5DG
Tel: +44 (0) 1904 567614
Fax: +44 (0) 1904 435356
PhD position in decision making
University of Giessen, Germany
Applications are invited for a PhD position in the Psychology department
at the University of Giessen, Germany. The position is available from 1
May 2014 through April 2016 and is funded by the project grant
“Modulation of value-based decision making by novelty”. Thesalary is on
the TV-H E13 scale (65%) for public employees.
The project will investigate the influence of contextual novelty on
decision-making using fMRI. The department offers an on-site
research-dedicated 3T MRI scanner. The successful candidate will collect
and analyze fMRI data using computational models of decision-making,
present the results at scientific conferences and write scientific papers.
We are looking for highly motivated candidates with a Master’s degree
(or equivalent) in neuroscience, psychology, biology or a related field
and with a strong interest in cognitive neuroscience and the ability to
work independently. We expect programming skills and proficiency in
English; prior experience in computational neuroscience and experience
with fMRI are of advantage.
Please send your CV, transcripts or degree certificates, a brief
statement of research interests and contact details of two referees by
e-mail to bianca.wittmann(a)psychol.uni-giessen.de. Applications will be
considered until the position is filled.
--
Dr. Bianca Wittmann
Assistant Professor of Biological Psychology
Department of Psychology and Sports Science
Justus Liebig University Giessen
Otto-Behaghel-Strasse 10F
35394 Giessen
Germany
Phone: +49- 641 - 99 26 160
Fax: +49- 641 - 99 26 169
The job posting is listed at www.jobs.cam.ac.uk/job/3229
<http://www.jobs.cam.ac.uk/job/3229> and informal enquiries should be
directed via email to Ms Karen Enright atke242(a)cam.ac.uk
<mailto:ke242@cam.ac.uk>.
The closing date for applications is 16th March 2014.
Best wishes
Kirstie
_*Research Associate (Fixed Term)*_
/Copied from www.jobs.cam.ac.uk/job/3229
<http://www.jobs.cam.ac.uk/job/3229>
/
Applications are invited for a post-doctoral researcher to join the
Cambridge Centre for Ageing and Neuroscience (Cam-CAN, www.cam-can.com
<http://www.cam-can.com>). This centre brings together a large group of
researchers across the University of Cambridge and at the MRC Cognition
and Brain Sciences Unit (MRC-CBSU) who aim to relate brain changes to
cognitive changes over the adult lifespan (covering ages 18-88). The
appointee will work with a unique population-representative sample of
700 adults on whom we have collected extensive cognitive and
neuroimaging measures from fMRI and MEG.
The role of the post holder will be to conduct multivariate and network
analyses of the Cam-CAN 700 dataset to elucidate brain systems changes
associated with normal ageing and its associated changes in cognitive
function. The appointee will be a physical scientist with a strong
interest in neuroscience of cognitive neuroscientist with a strong
background in imaging and imaging statistics, and cognitive and/or
physiological ageing.
Candidates should have, or be in the final stages of obtaining, a PhD in
physics, cognitive neuroscience, neuroimaging methods, applied
statistics or cognitive ageing. Knowledge of and experience in advanced
imaging analyses, particularly brain connectivity and network analysis
is essential, and it would be highly desirable to have some prior
experience of MEG/EEG and/or fMRI techniques. Excellent statistical,
computer programming (MATLAB and/or Python) and neuroimaging analysis
(SPM, Fieldtrip) skills are essential. Candidates should be careful,
efficient, be able to communicate effectively, and enjoy working as part
of a diverse and energetic interdisciplinary team. Candidates should
also be willing to run fMRI and MEG sessions which will require some
flexible working to accommodate evening (up to three per week) and
Saturday (up to two per month) sessions.
The applicant will be based in the Centre for Speech and Language in the
Department of Psychology but will work closely with colleagues in the
Brain Mapping Unit in the Department of Psychiatry.
The post will be appointed at the appropriate point on the University of
Cambridge's research associate salary scale, depending on the seniority
of the successful candidate.
Fixed-term: The funds for this post are available until 30 September
2015 in the first instance.
To apply online for this vacancy, please click on the 'Apply' button
below. This will route you to the University's Web Recruitment System,
where you will need to register an account (if you have not already) and
log in before completing the online application form.
Applicants should submit a covering letter, CV with full publication
list and contact details for three referees.
Informal enquiries should be directed via email to Ms Karen Enright at
ke242(a)cam.ac.uk <mailto:ke242@cam.ac.uk>.
Interviews will take place on Tuesday 25th March 2014.
Please quote reference RN02762 on your application and in any
correspondence about this vacancy.
The University values diversity and is committed to equality of opportunity.
The University has a responsibility to ensure that all employees are
eligible to live and work in the UK.
--
Kirstie Whitaker, PhD
Research Associate
Department of Psychiatry
University of Cambridge
*Mailing Address*
Douglas House
18b Trumpington Road
Cambridge, CB2 8AH
*Phone: *+44 7583 535 307
*Website:* www.kirstiewhitaker.com <http://www.kirstiewhitaker.com>
University of Pennsylvania
Brain Behavior Laboratory
Center for Neuroimaging in Psychiatry
Postdoctoral Research Fellow Position
The Brain & Behavior Laboratory (BBL) and the Center for Neuroimaging in
Psychiatry at the University of Pennsylvania seeks a postdoctoral fellow
with expertise in neuroimaging to join our group, led by Drs. Raquel and
Ruben Gur. The position is within the Neuropsychiatry Research Training
Program, which focuses on multidisciplinary integration of basic and
clinical neuroscience research in a cohesive effort to elucidate the
pathophysiology and neurodevelopmental etiologies of schizophrenia and
related psychiatric disorders. The postdoctoral fellow will have the
opportunity to take the lead on data analysis and publication of results
from one or more exciting datasets, including
1.Multivariate multimodal analysis of data from a large study of
neurodevelopmental genomics consisting of a sample of 1445 genotyped and
imaged adolescents and young adults, investigating how aberrations in
brain development contribute to the development of cognitive variability
and psychopathology.
2.Neurophysiological assessment (functional MRI, electroencephalography,
pupillometry) of aversive learning and reversal in young adults with
psychosis or at risk for psychosis, to elucidate the neural substrates
underlying negative symptomatology.
3.Behavioral and functional MRI assessment applying neuroeconomic
approaches to understand clinical reward deficits (anhedonia,
amotivation) in schizophrenia and mood disorders.
4. Integration of clinical, neurobehavioral and brain imaging measures
in individuals with the 22q11.2 deletion syndrome focusing on
identification of individuals at clinical risk for psychosis and
longitudinal studies.
5.Behavioral, structural MRI, electrophysiology and spectroscopic
imaging assessments of the olfactory system to identify
neurodevelopmental biomarkers that are predictors of adolescent
transition to psychosis.
The successful candidate will be joining a multi-disciplinary team of
scientists, programmers, and support staff addressing a variety of
neuroscience questions using behavior, multimodal brain imaging,
electrophysiology, and genetics.
Eligibility for a postdoctoral appointment on this NIH Training Grant
requires an advanced degree (M.D., Ph.D. or equivalent) in a relevant
discipline (neuroscience, psychology, engineering, statistics). The
candidate must have prior experience with neuroimaging data analysis,
and have an established record of productivity. Prior experience with
programming in bash, matlab, R/SAS or similar data mining tool is
desirable. An applicant must certify that he/she has received his/her
degree before the appointment is processed and must be a U.S. citizen,
non‐citizen national of the U.S., or a lawful permanent resident.
Applicants who are considered an underrepresented minority, individuals
with disabilities and individuals from disadvantaged backgrounds are
encouraged to apply. For more information on the NIH policies regarding
Recruitment and Retention Plan to Enhance Diversity please click the
following link: http://grants.nih.gov/training/faq_diversity.htm#A1
For inquiries, please contact:
Mr. Stace Moore
Academic and Clinical Coordinator
Neuropsychiatry Section
Department of Psychiatry
University of Pennsylvania
1034 Gates Pavilion, HUP
3400 Spruce Street
Philadelphia, PA 19104
Voice: (215)662-7119
Fax: (215)662-7903
stacem(a)upenn.edu <mailto:stacem@upenn.edu>
https://www.med.upenn.edu/bbl/training.shtml
University of Pennsylvania,
and Moss Rehabilitation Research Institute of Einstein Healthcare Network
Philadelphia, PA, USA
The Center for Functional Neuroimaging at University of Pennsylvania, in
collaboration with Moss Rehabilitation Research Institute of Einstein
Healthcare Network, is now recruiting a postdoctoral fellow in
neuroimaging data analysis beginning Spring/Summer 2014. The successful
candidate will join a highly collaborative, multidisciplinary team
conducting NIH-supported research on neural correlates of clinical
disorders of language and cognition. Based primarily at U. Penn, the
Fellow will bear responsibility for developing and implementing
multivariate MRI data analysis methods for lesion and multi-modal
neuroimaging data, under joint supervision of Dr. Ze Wang (neuroimaging
analysis methods, https://cfn.upenn.edu/~zewang/
<https://cfn.upenn.edu/%7Ezewang/>) and Dr. Myrna Schwartz
(cognition-brain relationships,
http://mrri.org/people/institute-scientists/myrna-f-schwartz).
Candidates must have a Ph.D. degree in biomedical engineering, or in one
of the following fields: computer science, electrical engineering, or
mathematics. Programming background using Matlab or C++ will be
necessary. Prior experience in neuroimaging research as evidenced by
publications and training will be preferred.
The University of Pennsylvania is an equal opportunity, affirmative
action employer. Women and minority candidates are strongly encouraged
to apply.
To apply, please send a statement of research interest and professional
goals, a CV, (p)reprints, and a list of 3 references to: Drs. Myrna
Schwartz mschwart(a)einstein.edu <mailto:mschwart@einstein.edu> and Ze
Wang (zewang(a)mail.med.upenn.edu <mailto:zewang@mail.med.upenn.edu>).
Dear Users
This afternoon (4.15 pm in YNiC open plan) there will be 3 internal
project proposal presentations:
1) Mladen Sormaz
"Using MVPA to reveal patterns of neural response to facial expression
and identity in the human brain"
Models of face processing suggest that different face-selective regions
are sensitive to either facial expression or identity (Haxby et al.,
2000). In a previous study, we have shown that that patterns of
response to different facial expressions are related to the perceptual
similarity of images (Sormaz et al., 2014). We have also shown that
patterns of response to different facial identities are related to the
similarity of the images (Rice et al. 2014). The aim of the current
study is to directly compare the relative contributions of expression
and identity information to the responses in different regions across
the ventral visual pathway using a multiple regression method for
analysing patterns of fMRI data.
2) Mahiko Konishi
"Changing the mind: exploring how the brain shifts from external to
internal focus"
In brief, the study will focus on fMRI scanning participants while they
perform a computer task that we developed. The task consists of two
conditions that are very similar to each other but differ critically in
the way they control the on-task focus level of participants: the hard
condition requires constant focus on the task to be performed
successfully, while the easy condition can be conquered by focusing on
the task only in rare, cued moments, leaving the participants with the
option of daydreaming for the majority of time. These two conditions
alternate continuously in the paradigm, and transitions from one
condition to the other are cued. Critically, the analysis will focus on
these cued transition moments to see how the brain re-sets, and thus
shifts, from external to internal focus, and vice versa.
3) Florence Ruby
"Role of episodic and semantic processes in self-generated thought"
Everyone is welcome to attend and refreshments will be served afterwards.
Best wishes
Rebecca
--
************************************************************************
Dr. Rebecca E. Millman
Science Liaison Officer
York Neuroimaging Centre
The Biocentre
York Science Park
Heslington
YO10 5DG
Tel: +44 (0) 1904 567614
Fax: +44 (0) 1904 435356
---------------- job ad -----------------
I am looking for a postdoc, preferably a neuropsychologist who has some
imaging experience and a strong affiliation with cognition (outside the
scanner) and psychosis. Excellent statistical skills are required. We
have a position for 1 years with the possibility to extend. our team
consists of me, one other post-doc and 7 PhD students. It will be your
responsibility to supervise the students with their protocols and
manuscripts as well as working on independent studies.
Iris Sommer, MD PhD
Professor of Psychiatry
Room A01.160 Psychiatry Department
University Medical Centre Utrecht
Heidelberglaan 100 Utrecht
The Netherlands
+31-887556365
i.sommer(a)umcutrecht.nl
www.stemmenpoliumcutrecht.nl <http://www.stemmenpoliumcutrecht.nl>
/Neuroimaging Postdoctoral Research Position in Mild Traumatic Brain
Injury and
/
/Posttraumatic Stress Disorder/
Memory Disorders Research Center and Translational Research Center for TBI
and Stress Disorders
The Boston University Memory Disorders Research Center and the
Translational Research Center for TBI and Stress Disorders are seeking
an advanced postdoctoral fellow with expertise in Magnetic Resonance
Imaging. The postdoctoral fellow will work closely with
neuropsychologists and neuroscientists on a clinical research program
aimed at elucidating the neural and cognitive sequelae of posttraumatic
stress disorder and blast-induced traumatic brain injury in returning
Veterans, as well as cognitive and neural change subsequent to exercise
training.The candidate will receive advanced training in multi-modal
imaging (fMRI, diffusion tensor imaging, volumetric and surface-based
analyses, ASL) and the use of cognitive and MRI outcome measures
subsequent to exercise intervention in Veterans with mTBI and PTSD. Dr.
Scott Hayes will be the primary mentor, and the fellow will also
collaborate with an interdisciplinary team including Drs. Mieke
Verfaellie, David Salat, Daniel Forman, and Jasmeet Pannu Hayes.The
successful candidate will have a doctoral degree in cognitive
neuroscience, neuropsychology, biomedical engineering, or a closely
related field, and substantial experience in MRI data acquisition and
analysis. Candidate should have expertise working with MRI analysis
software such as AFNI, FSL, SPM, or FreeSurfer, as well as familiarity
with unix and Matlab.Experience interpreting neuropsychological and/or
exercise physiology data and previous work with clinical populations are
also desirable. The postdoctoral fellow will interact with several
research groups at VA Boston studying TBI and PTSD in returning
veterans. The candidate should have a keen interest in developing an
independent research career.
The starting date is flexible. A minimum two-year commitment is
required. Salary for highly qualified candidates may be up to $52,000.
U.S. citizenship is required for consideration.Potential applicants are
encouraged to *immediately* email a letter describing research interests
and experience and CV and should arrange to have three letters of
recommendation emailed to Dr. Scott Hayes at smhayes(a)bu.edu
<mailto:smhayes@bu.edu>
Lab website:www.bu.edu/brainlab <http://www.bu.edu/brainlab>
The Department of Veterans Affairs is an Equal Opportunity Employer.
--
Scott M. Hayes, Ph.D.
Memory Disorders Research Center
Neuroimaging Research Center
VA Boston Healthcare System
Assistant Professor
Department of Psychiatry
Boston University School of Medicine