Some of you who use MRI have raised some concerns about the "blurriness"
of the image projected in the bore of the scanner.
I have now managed to source, cut and test new screen material thats
that result in a far more crisp image (in fact, a couple of projects
have now been using this material routinely).
Although these screens are available for immediate use to all users, the
older screen material will still be left in by default (for now) so that
users that are already scanning on an existing project do not have
anything changed. The existing screen material will also be stored and
remain available for any longitudinal studies.
Anyone wanting to use these new screens should ask the MRI operator to
put in the thinner screen material for their scan session. Any projects
starting to scan are encouraged to use this better material from the outset.
Please drop me a line if you have any questions.
--
Andre'
************************************************************************
Andre Gouws
York Neuroimaging Centre
University of York
The Biocentre
York Science Park
Heslington
YO10 5NY
Tel: +44 (0) 1904 435327
Fax: +44 (0) 1904 435356
If this your bike then I would advise moving it as it will get damaged
at that location as large nitrogen containers are moved in that area
---------------
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
PhD position @ Aberdeen Biomedical Imaging Centre
Automated Detection of Brain Lesions in the Aberdeen Children of the
1950s and Analysis of Lifecourse Determinants
Application Deadline: Friday 11 March 2016
As we age brain microvascular disease increases, which is seen on
magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) as white matter hyperintensities (WMH),
cerebral microbleeds (MB) and enlarged perivascular spaces (PVS).
Quantification of these imaging lesions is a labour intensive, manual
task with inherent intra-observer variability that requires extensive
training to perform accurately. This studentship will develop an
automated method that can be applied to MRI images from large population
samples to improve accuracy, reproducibility, speed up image analysis
and facilitate large scale multi-centre studies in ageing and
neuropsychiatric disease. Methods will be developed and tested on
existing data, applied to newly collected STRADL data and validated in
external datasets. Analysis of predictors and outcomes of lesions will
inform the causes and health consequences of these lesions.
https://www.abdn.ac.uk/clsm/graduate/research/aberdeen-children-1201.php
Gordon D. Waiter PhD CSci MIPEM CPhys MInstP
Aberdeen Biomedical Imaging Centre
School of Medicine, Medical Sciences and Nutrition
University of Aberdeen
Lilian Sutton Building
Foresterhill
Aberdeen
AB25 2ZD
Tel: +44 (0)1224 438356 (University Internal 8356: NHS Internal 768356)
Fax: +44 (0)1224 438364
g.waiter(a)abdn.ac.uk
www.abdn.ac.uk/ims/profiles/g.waiterwww.abdn.ac.uk/ims/imaging
=======================================
In the context of the European Research Council Grant “RESHAPE:
REstoring the Self with embodiable HAnd ProsthesEs”, we are seeking two
outstanding Post-Doc scientists and two highly-motivated PhD students to
join us in developing new tools and methods to improve the embodiment of
robotic hand prostheses and study the related brain processes.
Activities will be carried out in a multidisciplinary research
environment (Clinical Neurophysiology and Neuroengineering) @ Campus
Bio-Medico University, Rome Italy (www.unicampus.it).
Post-Doc ideal candidates should
· - have relevant publications in international journals and
experience in fund raising
· - be English mother tongue or have almost comparable fluency
· - own at least two of the following expertise:
1. Programming for development/customization of interactive
Virtual/Augmented Reality environment
2. EEG/MRI signal processing
3. Body ownership, embodiment, cognitive neuroscience.
PhD Student ideal candidates should
· - be English mother tongue or have good fluency
· - have a master degree (or equivalent) in
o biomedical robotics, biomedical engineering, computer science or
other related fields
o medicine, neuroscience, neurophysiology or other related fields
Suitable candidates can introduce themselves by contacting Giovanni Di
Pino (g.dipino(a)unicampus.it) and Domenico Formica (d.formica(a)unicampus.it).
--
Giovanni Pellegrino, MD
Multimodal Functional Imaging Laboratory
Montreal Neurological Institute, McGill University
Address: 332 Duff Medical Building, 3775 rue University, Montreal, QC,
H3A 2B4, Canada
Phone: (514) 398–1678
Fax: (514) 398–7461
Email: giovannipellegrino(a)gmail.com, giovanni.pellegrino2(a)mcgill.ca
Homepage: http://www.bic.mni.mcgill.ca/ResearchLabsMFIL/PeopleGiovanni
=================================
Job opening for a research MR technician at:
Department of Psychology, University of Turin
Position: The Department of Psychology, University of Turin, seeks to
recruit a research oriented MRI technician to work at the Centre for
Neuroimaging (CNI). CNI is a specialized hospital cum research facility
with a Philips 3 Tesla Scanner, software for acquisition and analysis of
fMRI, system for audio/visual/haptic stimulation, and transcranial
magnetic stimulation setup (rTMS). In addition, the CNI is also equipped
with systems for recording of electrophysiological measures and high
resolution MRI compatible EEG system.
The position will be initially for a period of 12 months (renewable
subsequently). The job and pay scale will be according to the category
D1 (art. 22; contracts art. 22 replace Article 19). For an economic
reference, please refer to the following table:
http://www.unito.it/sites/default/files/costi_personale_ta_det_2014.pdf
Qualifications:
1. Preference will be given to candidates in possession of a PhD
degree in the field of Neuroscience, Neuroimaging, Biostatistics or
Complex Systems Neural.
2. In addition, proven experience documented by publications,
references, presentations at national or international conferences is
highly desirable in the following areas: Functional neuroimaging,
neurophysiology, use of software for the presentation of the stimuli and
the analysis of the fMRI data and neuro-psychophysiological.
Responsibilities: As a research technician, the personal will be
involved in assisting the functional imaging studies utilizing MRI and
complementary equipment and means.
For questions about the position, please contact Prof. Cristina Becchio
(cristina.becchio(a)unito.it).
=================================
FULL-TIME RESEARCH ASSOCIATE IN NEUROIMAGING - Seeking a bright and
motivated research associate to perform structural and functional
neuroimaging analyses on several newly funded NIH studies examining
neurobiological markers of major mood disorders and their treatments in
children, adolescents, and young adults. The research associate will
conduct neuroimaging scans in children and adolescents, perform database
management including data entry and cleaning, data preprocessing and
analyses, and assist with preparing and presenting results for
publication and future grant submissions. Current techniques include
high-resolution structural imaging, functional MRI, and diffusion tensor
imaging. Preference will be given to an individual with experience
preprocessing and analyzing functional and structural neuroimaging data
using a variety of statistical packages, including SPM, FSL, and/or
FreeSurfer, and to an individual who has a publication track record of
analyzing reward paradigms or experience conducting research in mood or
other developmental disorders. The position represents an excellent
opportunity to further develop research skills and learn basic
principles of clinical and cognitive neuroscience and to gain exposure
to patient and normative pediatric populations over a wide developmental
range. The successful applicant will be an energetic, self-directed
learner with strong writing and leadership skills and a keen interest in
the lab's research. Knowledge of programming, scripting, and statistics
is a plus. Applicants must be able to commit to at least two years for
consideration. Stanford is an equal opportunity employer and all
qualified applicants will receive consideration without regard to race,
color, religion, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, national
origin, disability, veteran status, or any other characteristic
protected by law. We are thus interested in candidates who are committed
to the highest standards of scholarship and professional activities, and
to the development of a climate that supports equality and diversity.
If interested, please send a statement of scientific interests, a CV,
three letters of recommendation, and contact information for at least 3
academic references to Dr. Manpreet Singh, at mksingh(a)stanford.edu.
Manpreet K. Singh, MD MS
Assistant Professor of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences
Director, Stanford Pediatric Mood Disorders Program
Akiko Yamazaki and Jerry Yang Faculty Scholar in Pediatric Translational
Medicine, Stanford Child
Health Research Institute
Stanford University, Stanford, CA
Phone: (650) 725-5922
Email: mksingh(a)stanford.edu
Website: http://med.stanford.edu/pedmood/
================================
The Olin Neuropsychiatry Research Center (http://nrc-iol.org) located in
Hartford, CT USA is looking for a research assistant II/programmer to
assist with neuroinformatics development. The Olin Center is a 40 person
department, opened in 2003 at the Institute of Living. We have a Siemens
Skyra 3T whole-body MRI, EEG, and TMS suites. We are looking for someone
to help develop the Neuroinformatics Database
(http://github.com/gbook/nidb), manage neuroimaging data, and assist
with the programming of automated neuroimaging processing systems. The
primary focus of the position will be developing and maintaining imaging
and non-imaging databases, but duties will also include responding to
support requests, training, documentation, and bug fixing. The Olin
Center's database of 10,000 imaging sessions also provides an internally
accessible source of data for the candidate's own analyses, and the
candidate will have the opportunity to contribute to manuscripts.
Candidate is expected to have a bachelor’s degree in computer science or
engineering, and experience with programming and/or SQL databases
required. Experience programming PHP, Perl, HTML, SQL, in a Linux
environment is strongly preferred. Neuroimaging experience is also
preferred, but not necessary. Contact Greg at gregory.book(a)hhchealth.org
=========================
We are seeking a full-time Postdoctoral Research Assistant to join the
Quantitative Biomedical Inference Group at the Institute of Biomedical
Engineering (IBME) in Headington. The post is funded by Cancer Research
UK, and the EPSRC, and is fixed-term for 2 years.
The research project is within the Image Analysis Theme of the Oxford
Cancer Imaging Centre, in close interaction with clinicians and medical
physicists in the centre. You will be responsible for evaluating new
physiological Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) methods and developing
image analysis methods to extract haemodynamic and metabolic information
from them. The project will focus on the use of Arterial Spin Labelling
MRI to measure perfusion and Chemical Exchange Saturation Transfer MRI
to measure metabolism, applied to cancer imaging and for the modelling
of tumour function.
You should possess (or be near completion of) a relevant PhD in MR
imaging and/or image analysis, together with relevant experience to work
in a multi-disciplinary environment with both engineers and clinicians.
You should also possess strong mathematical and programming skills (e.g.
matlab, C++) as well as excellent communication skills. A good
publications record in relevant international peer-reviewed conferences
and journals is essential.
http://www.eng.ox.ac.uk/jobs/current-vacancies/vacancy/121931-Postdoctoral-…
=============================
FULL-TIME POSTDOCTORAL FELLOW: We are seeking a full-time postdoctoral
researcher experienced in the analysis of structural and functional
magnetic resonance imaging data to work on several newly funded NIH
studies examining neurobiological markers of major mood disorders and
their treatments in children, adolescents, and young adults. Activities
will include conducting neuroimaging scans in children and adolescents,
processing cognitive and neuroimaging data, cleaning and quality
control, and leading a neuroimaging team in collaborative data analyses.
Applicants should have a Ph.D. or equivalent in clinical, cognitive,
or computational neuroscience, psychology, computer science, biomedical
engineering, statistics, or a related field. The fellow should have
strong programming (i.e., MATLAB) and writing skills, experience in
neuroimaging or a related field, and a strong interest in pursuing an
academic career path. Preference will be given to applicants who have
experience with multiple analysis methods/toolkits in the relevant
modality, a publication track record of analyzing data from multiple
brain imaging modalities (e.g. both structural and functional imaging),
experience analyzing reward paradigms or conducting research in mood or
other developmental disorders.
The postdoctoral fellow will engage in analyzing and integrating
multimodal clinical, cognitive, and neuroimaging data of children,
adolescents, and young adults. The fellow will be responsible for
leading new and existing analysis pipelines for functional and/or
anatomical MRI in collaboration with faculty and support staff, for
assessment and mitigation of artifacts, and for continuing analysis of
our existing database of multimodal MRI data. The fellow will also
assist in supervision/training of graduate or undergraduate students and
research assistants and in the preparation of manuscripts for
publication. Finally, the postdoctoral fellow will assist with the
preparation of progress reports and future grant submissions. Work will
be carried out with a team of interdisciplinary investigators at
Stanford University, led by PI Manpreet Singh, MD. Stanford is an equal
opportunity employer and all qualified applicants will receive
consideration without regard to race, color, religion, sex, sexual
orientation, gender identity, national origin, disability, veteran
status, or any other characteristic protected by law.
Please send a cover letter, CV and three letters of recommendation to
mksingh(a)stanford.edu. Position available immediately.
Manpreet K. Singh, MD MS
Assistant Professor of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences
Director, Stanford Pediatric Mood Disorders Program
Akiko Yamazaki and Jerry Yang Faculty Scholar in Pediatric Translational
Medicine, Stanford Child
Health Research Institute
Stanford University, Stanford, CA
Phone: (650) 725-5922
Email: mksingh(a)stanford.edu
Website: http://med.stanford.edu/pedmood/
=================================
Position Description:
The Education and Brain Sciences Research Lab directed by Dr. Laurie E.
Cutting of Vanderbilt University in Nashville, Tennessee is seeking an
independent and motivated postdoctoral researcher. The fulltime research
fellow position is appointed through the Vanderbilt Brain Institute in
one-year intervals, with re-appointments anticipated in years 2 and 3
(contingent upon satisfactory performance during the previous year). The
successful candidate will have a strong interest in developing and
optimizing neuroimaging data management and processing, and will provide
expertise that supports our lab’s efforts to integrate neuroimaging and
behavioral data on multiple projects. The postdoc will provide
expertise to our team, and will also interact closely with the
Vanderbilt University Institute of Imaging Science (VUIIS), attending
meetings and trainings to engage in scientific exchange and encourage
cutting-edge innovation. Compensation is in line with NIH postdoc salary
guidelines.
Lab and Facilities:
We offer a challenging multidisciplinary research environment in which
we study reading (reading development, reading comprehension) using
functional and structural MRI, as well as psychometric testing. Our
laboratory is located in the highly-ranked Peabody College of Education,
and our imaging is conducted at VUIIS (www.vuiis.vanderbilt.edu) Center
for Human Imaging Research which operates 2 full-time research Philips
3T scanners, as well as a 7T Philips scanner. We conduct research under
multiple grants, with a current focus on two longitudinal studies of
reading in children and adolescents, offering opportunities for
publication and presentation at conferences.
Basic Requirements:
• PhD in Neuroscience, Biomedical Engineering, Bioinformatics, Computer
Science, Neuropsychology or related discipline.
• Some programming skills (Python, Matlab, UNIX) strongly preferred
• A demonstrated record of innovative scientific research in
neuroimaging (preferably in both fMRI and DWI)
• Strong skills in the usage of one or more common neuroimaging packages
(FSL, SPM, Afni, Freesurfer); experience with XNAT is a plus, but not
required
• Strong communication skills in spoken and written English
• Ability to work closely with an interdisciplinary team, providing
training to students and researchers
• Authorized to work in the United States
Contact Information:
For more information regarding this position, please contact Laura A.
Barquero, Ph.D. laura.barquero(a)vanderbilt.edu with any questions. If you
are interested in the position, please provide a letter, CV, and names
and contact information for 3 academic/professional references.
===================================
The Centro Nacional de Investigaciones Cardiovasculares (CNIC) is a
public research institute dedicated to excellence in cardiovascular
research and to translating new knowledge into real improvements in
clinical practice. This modern building is equipped with the latest
scientific equipment, including state-of-the-art imaging technologies,
and a comprehensive research-support infrastructure.
Postdoctoral position available for an experienced researcher in the
field of neurobiology to develop a project in the brain-to-heart axis.
The hosting group is a growing multidiciplinary very competitive young
team in the field of myocardial diseases.
Requirements
Applicants must have a PhD or equivalent (e.g. medical specialty in
neurology) in neuroscience or a related field (computational neuroscience).
Essential skills include experience in developing models of neuroimaging
(fMRI, PET).
Although not essential, experience in animal models of brain disease
will be highly considered in the evaluation period.
Background in MATLAB, statistical analysis, and software packages such
as SPM and FSL.
Offered
2-year full-time contract to develop the project. According to results,
an additional 3-year extension period might be considered.
Competitive salary (33K – 37K € per annum in accordance to previous
experience)
Integration in an international center of Excellence leader in the field
of cardiovascular diseases approached from different angles.
Extensive training possibilities in complementary skills.
Extensive access to state-of-the-art infrastructures for the project
(human hybrid PET/MR (3Tesla), large animal dedicated 3Tesla MRI,
PET/CT, cath labs, ...)
Project
Imaging-based study of brain functionality during/after myocardial
diseases (acute and chronic). Both large animal models and patients will
be part of the study.
Starting date: Second quarter 2016.
Group ref:
https://www.cnic.es/es/investigacion/laboratorio-traslacional-para-imagen-t…
Please send an email to bibanez(a)cnic.es and quote ref H2H protection
postdoc.
======================================
The Brain Development Imaging Laboratory (BDIL) at the Dept. of
Psychology, San Diego State University (SDSU), is offering 1-2
postdoctoral positions in diffusion-weighted and other anatomical MRI
techniques.
Job Description
Post-doctoral positions will be supported by several newly funded NIH
projects examining brain structure and network organization across the
lifespan in autism spectrum disorders (ASD) including a study of
toddlers and a study of older adults. New projects will implement
multi-shell diffusion weighted imaging (i.e. multiple b-values,
appropriate for calculation of ODFs, tractography, examination of
neurite density in gray and white matter), multi-modal neuroanatomical
imaging (e.g. combined T1, T2, DWI), and simultaneous multi-slice fMRI.
The postdoctoral scholar will be responsible for implementation of new
analysis pipelines for diffusion weighted and/or anatomical MRI in
collaboration with faculty and support staff, for assessment and
mitigation of artifacts, and for continuing analysis of our existing
database of multimodal MRI data. Fellow will assist in
supervision/training of graduate students and research assistants and in
the preparation of manuscripts for publication. The postdoctoral fellow
will regularly interact with collaborating faculty at SDSU and
University of California San Diego and will have access to the rich San
Diego Neuroscience and Cognitive Science communities.
Requirements
· PhD in Neuroscience, Cognitive Science, Psychology, Biomedical
Engineering, or other relevant field.
· Experience in data acquisition, preprocessing, and analysis of
brain MRI data, with particular focus on diffusion and/or anatomical MRI.
· Preference will be given to applicants with:
o Experience with multiple analysis methods/toolkits in the relevant
modality.
o Experience in multiple brain imaging modalities (e.g. both diffusion
and functional imaging).
o Experience with ASD, other developmental disorders, or normal aging.
Brain Development Imaging Lab & Research Facilities
BDIL (www.sci.sdsu.edu/bdil) is a diverse and collaborative research
group with 3 faculty members and multiple PhD and Master’s students in
Psychology, Cognitive Science, Clinical Psychology, and BioInformatics
from both SDSU and University of California, San Diego (UCSD). Research
applies multiple imaging modalities (e.g. DWI, anatomical MRI, fMRI,
functional connectivity MRI, MR spectroscopy) as well as behavioral and
neuropsychological measures to investigate the brain bases of ASD and
age-related change across the lifespan (1-65 years). BDIL collaborates
with experts in MR physics, Radiology, EEG, MEG, and Bioinformatics to
implement innovative imaging and analysis techniques (e.g., simultaneous
fMR/EEG recording, combined MEG and MRI). BDIL maintains close ties with
faculty at UCSD Center for Functional MRI (CFMRI) where imaging is
performed and with affiliated faculty at UCSD School of Medicine. BDIL
researchers have full access to CFMRI (http://fmri.ucsd.edu/), a
research dedicated facility with two 3T human research scanners (8 & 32
channel head coils), led by top experts in radiology physics, and
supported by engineering staff.
To Apply
Please e-mail CV, research statement, reprints, and 3 letters of
recommendation to Ralph-Axel Mueller at: rmueller(a)sdsu.edu.
====================================
The Departments of Medicine and of Radiology and Imaging Sciences at
Emory University is seeking a postdoctoral fellow to work with a team of
physicians and neuroscientists focused on neuroimaging (MRI: Arterial
Spin Labeling and cerebrovascular reactivity). The position provides
excellent opportunity to work in an interdisciplinary environment and
have close interactions with MR physicists, radiologists, neurologist,
internists and neuroscientists. Accesses are available to two dedicated
research MR 3T Siemens Tim-Trio scanners, one 9.4T animal scanner, and a
powerful computer-cluster. Close collaboration with the Emory University
Hospital, which houses a clinical 3T Siemens Tim-Trio and five 1.5T MR
scanners, allows easy translation of technical developments to clinical
settings.
The qualifications of a successful candidate should include
· A PhD degree in Electrical Engineering, Biomedical Engineering,
Physics, or other related fields
· Strong background in signal processing, image processing and
quantitative analysis. Excellent proficiency with Matlab and/or C/C++
programming language.
· Demonstrated independent research capabilities and good
organizational and inter-personal skills.
Previous experiences with medical image processing including freesrufer,
FSL and SPM are desirable;
The candidate is expected to work on projects involving performing image
processing using existing tools and development of new methodologies.
Potential research projects depend on the mutual interests of the
candidate and the PI. These may include but are not limited to: (1)
analyzing CO2-vasoreactivity images; (2) reconstruction and analysis
methods for quantitative susceptibility mapping (QSM), (3)
quantification and analysis methods for arterial spin labeling, dynamic
susceptibility contrast imaging and diffusion imaging. Plans to obtain
independent funding is highly desirable.
Emory University provides competitive salaries commensurate with
experience. This position is funded by NIH grants for at least 5 years.
To apply, please send your CV to Ihab Hajjar, MD (ihajjar(a)emory.edu) and
Deqiang Qiu, PhD (dqiu3(a)emory.edu).
====================================
DEPARTMENT OF VETERANS AFFAIRS
Palo Alto WRIISC Special Postdoctoral Fellowship Program
in Advanced Neuroimaging
(VAPA-WRIISC-SFP)
The Office of Academic Affiliations, Department of Veterans Affairs
(VA), is now accepting applications for a two-year special Postdoctoral
Fellowship Training Program in advanced neuroimaging with an emphasis on
Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI), Posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD),
cognitive impairment and chronic pain. The Fellowship can begin between
July 1st and October 31st, 2016. This is a joint fellowship between VA
Palo Alto War Related Illness and Injury Study Center (WRIISC) and the
Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences at Stanford University.
The VAPA-WRIISC-SFP site is linked to the two other WRIISC fellowship
sites (Washington, DC, East Orange, NJ) as well as the VA Mental Illness
Research, Education, and Clinical Center (MIRECC) fellowship program
(based at Palo Alto) for didactic, academic, and research efforts. The
Palo Alto WRIISC specializes in integrating anatomical/functional
Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) and Positron Emission Tomography (PET)
to improve the diagnostic/prognostic value of neuroimaging in the
clinical setting. The fellowship provides a unique opportunity to (a)
receive training in Diffusion Tensor Imaging (DTI), functional Magnetic
Resonance Imaging (fMRI) and Voxel-based morphometry (VBM) from a team
of experienced neuroimagers and (b) relate neuroimaging findings to
clinical cases in consensus conferences with our team of neurologists,
nurse practitioners, psychiatrists & psychologists. There is also
opportunity to explore projects in psychology and dementia with WRIISC,
MIRECC, and Stanford faculty. In collaboration with their mentors,
fellows will develop and conduct a research project, publish and present
findings, participate in grant writing, and utilize the latest
technologies for research (including a 3 Tesla MRI scanner).
Applicants must be US citizens. The ideal candidate will have a Ph.D. in
cognitive neuroscience, computer science, psychology, or a related
discipline. Prior experience in neuroimaging is essential. Experience
with Linux, MATLAB, SPM8/12, FreeSurfer & FSL is highly desirable and
programming skills would be a big plus.
A. To be eligible to apply for the WRIISC Fellowship Program you must
hold a PhD in one of the above described disciplines and be able to
provide evidence of U.S. citizenship.
B. Applications must be received by March 20, 2016. Applicants must
submit: a) a letter confirming they can fulfill the eligibility
requirements; b) a personal statement describing their interest in the
Fellowship; c) 3 letters of recommendation; and d) a current curriculum
vitae. These materials can be submitted directly to the PhD Fellowship
Program Director: Ansgar Furst, PhD at ansgar.furst(a)va.gov.
C. If the applicant is identified as the candidate of choice for this
site, they will be required to produce all documents listed in the above
section A and the following additional documents:
Transcripts from all educational institutions
VA Form 10-2850d, “Application for Health Professions Trainees.”
For more information, please contact Ansgar Furst, PhD at the WRIISC
Palo Alto Fellowship site, (650) 493-5000, "1", "1" then x68652 or
ansgar.furst(a)va.gov.
See also:
http://www.warrelatedillness.va.gov/
DEPARTMENT OF VETERANS AFFAIRS
Palo Alto WRIISC Special Fellowship Program (PhD track) with Research
Interests in Mental Health and Clinical Neuroscience
(VAPA-WRIISC-SFP)
===================
Postdoctoral position at the Department of Experimental and Applied
Psychology of the Vrije Universiteit Brussel (Belgium)
We are seeking a highly motivated postdoctoral researcher for a 1-year
project on cognitive control. The project will be supervised by Eva Van
den Bussche (Vrije Universiteit Brussel;
http://homepages.vub.ac.be/~evdbussc/ and http://copsresearchgroup.be/)
and Tom Verguts (Universiteit Gent; http://users.ugent.be/~tverguts/).
The supervisors are specialized in cognitive control. Each department
(Brussels and Ghent) provides a stimulating environment for cognitive
neuroscience research.The candidate will carry out behavioral, EEG and
fMRI experiments. Experience with these techniques (especially fMRI) is
a requirement. We have access to a research-dedicated 3T Siemens MR
scanner, Biosemi ActiveTwo EEG system and state-of-the-art equipment for
experimentation.
Candidates should have a doctoral degree in psychology, (cognitive)
neuroscience, or a related discipline on the starting date. The starting
date can be anywhere in 2016, so candidates who will defend their PhD in
the near future can also apply. Salary is according to standard Belgian
regulations. Although the official language at the Vrije Universiteit
Brussel and Ghent University is Dutch, knowledge of Dutch is not required.
Interested candidates should send a CV, motivation letter, and two
(email) addresses of potential referees to
Eva.Van.den.Bussche(a)vub.ac.be. Informal inquiries can also be sent via
email. Candidates will be considered until the position is filled.
Prof. Dr. Eva Van den Bussche
Faculty of Psychology and Educational Sciences
Pleinlaan 2, B-1050 Brussel
Office: 3C241
Phone : +32-(0)2-629 14 82
Fax : +32-(0)2-629 24 89
E-mail: Eva.Van.den.Bussche(a)vub.ac.be
URL: http://homepages.vub.ac.be/~evdbussc//
================================
Applications are invited for a 3-year full-time post-doctoral position
investigating memory-related brain processes during post-learning sleep.
The project will use EEG, fMRI and transcranial electrical stimulation
(tES) together with state-of-the-art multivariate analysis methods to
capture and experimentally manipulate consolidation mechanisms in the
sleeping human brain.
The successful candidate will work in the Episodic Memory Laboratory at
the University of Birmingham (UK) and will be supervised by Dr Bernhard
Staresina. We work in close collaboration with a vibrant memory research
community (http://www.memorybham.com/) and have access to multimodal
neuroimaging facilities including 7T MRI, MEG, TMS and intracranial EEG.
Applicants must have a PhD in a relevant area (e.g., Psychology,
Neuroscience, Computer Science), have demonstrable expertise in sleep
research, EEG, fMRI and/or tES and have advanced programming and
analysis skills (using MATLAB or equivalent). Publications in
peer-reviewed journals and conference presentations at international
meetings are required. A background in memory research is highly desirable.
The proposed start date is September 2016.
If you are interested and wish to find out more, please contact Dr
Bernhard Staresina (b.staresina(a)bham.ac.uk) with your CV and a brief
statement of interest.
Bernhard Staresina, PhD
Sir Henry Dale Fellow
School of Psychology
University of Birmingham
www.memorybham.com/bernhard-staresina
===============================
We are looking for a new team member for a two-year postdoc position
funded via a Medical Research Council Grant.
You should be medically qualified, with a PhD in MRI or PET ± EEG (as
the project will be ambitious enough, you should have a thorough
grounding in at least two of the modalities).
Full details can be obtained by following the link below:
https://www.hirewire.co.uk/HE/1061247/MS_JobDetails.aspx?JobID=66986
The closing date for applications is on the 19th of February.
With best wishes,
Alexander
-----------------------------------------
Alexander Hammers, MD PhD
Professor (Honorary Consultant) of Imaging and Neuroscience
Head of PET Imaging Centre
Division of Imaging Sciences and Biomedical Engineering
King's College London
St Thomas' Hospital, London
Telephone +44-(0)20 7188 8364 (PA Amanda Provencal)
Email alexander.hammers(a)kcl.ac.uk
=======================================
application to be sent to Julie Bakker (jbakker(a)ulg.ac.be). :-)
C.
Within the research group of Dr. Julie Bakker at the GIGA Neurosciences,
University of Liège, Belgium, a position is available for a
Post-doctoral fellow (m/f)
Full-time (38 hours/week)
Description of the project
The overall aim of the project is to unravel the role of pubertal
gonadal hormones in brain sexual differentiation using Kallmann Syndrome
as model. The position will involve the measurement of brain activity
and structure in male and female patients with Kallmann syndrome as well
as control men and women using structural and functional MRI. The
candidate will join a young and dynamic research group.
Requirements
We are looking for an excellent, motivated post-doctoral fellow with a
strong background in neuroimaging research. The candidate is expected to
have an interest in behavioral neuroscience and neuroendocrinology, and
preferably has a background in this type of research. Proficiency in all
stages of MRI research, including the study design, acquisition,
processing and analysis of imaging data is absolutely required. Previous
experience in multimodal imaging is considered a plus. Good writing
skills, publications in high impact journals and a proven track record
of successful grant/fellowship writing are expected.
Appointment
The position is temporary for a period of 1 year with renewal possible.
Starting date
October 2016
Location
The GIGA is a major centre for research and development in biotechnology
and is one of a very few centers in Europe that have excelled at
integrating academic research, collaborations with companies, technology
transfer and training facilities. The GIGA Neurosciences unit aims at
carrying out top-level research on development, normal functions, and
disorders of the nervous system. The MRI acquisitions will take place at
the Cyclotron Research Centre (CRC), which has now become a new research
unit within the GIGA (GIGA-CRC in vivo imaging).
Applications
Send your application, including a curriculum vitae, or requests for
additional information to: jbakker(a)ulg.ac.be
Deadline
The application deadline will remain open until a suitable candidate has
been identified.
===========================
Research Assistant , Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine;
Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences; Division of Geriatric
Psychiatry and Neuropsychiatry
Description: The Neuroimaging Laboratory of the Division of Geriatric
Psychiatry and Neuropsychiatry focuses on the application of high
resolution neuroreceptor PET, 3T and 7T MR imaging to the study of
cognitive and affective symptoms in late life (including normal aging,
late life depression, mild cognitive impairment and Parkinson’s Disease)
and the effects of interventions including pharmacotherapy and brain
stimulation. The candidate will be responsible for PET and MR image
processing and analysis, including region of interest, voxel-wise and
network analysis methods. The candidate will have the opportunity to
contribute to research papers and scientific presentations.
Skills and Knowledge Required: Bachelor’s degree required in psychology,
neuroscience or a related field. Preference will be given to individuals
with experience in neuroimaging research. Strong preference will be
given to individuals with experience using AFNI, FSL, SPM, or
Freesurfer. Strong attention to detail, excellent verbal/written
communication and organization skills and self-motivation is critical.
Must be able to work effectively in a multidisciplinary team environment.
Please Contact: Gwenn S. Smith, Ph.D. Richman Family Professor,
Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences. gsmith95(a)jhmi.edu
==========================
This is to announce a position at the University of Massachusetts
Amherst in the Institute for Applied Life Sciences. We are looking for a
Senior Research Fellow/MRI Physicist – Neuroimaging.
Job Description:
The Physicist performs advanced research techniques and procedures in
Core specific science and is responsible for day-to-day management of
specialized Core facilities. In addition, the candidate participates in
recommendations on purchase of major Core equipment and provides timely
support to customers utilizing the facility in an efficient manner. The
Physicist also supports investigators with Letters of Support for grant
funding through Core, prepares proposals for new instrumentation in
collaboration with PIs (i.e., Major Research Instrumentation proposals
from NSF and S10 program from NIH), maintains instrumentation service &
maintenance and monitors new developments and improvements in technology
to keep core competitive and state-of-the-art.
The candidate also works with users to select protocols best suited to
their needs, explores experimental options and trains new users, and
oversees established users. Excellent communication skills are essential
and candidates are required to support academic and industry
investigators, including data collection and analyses, and project
prioritization.
Requirements:
Minimum Qualifications:
A Ph.D. in physics, engineering, neuroscience or a related field is
required and 3-5 years of relevant post-doctoral experience in Core
Facility Field.
Apply by February 16, 2016 for priority consideration, however
applications will be accepted till the position is filled. Application
materials must include 1) a cover letter summarizing interests and
qualifications, 2) a complete curriculum vitae, and 3) contact
information for 3 professional references. Please include Requisition
#R51472 on your application materials.
Complete details can be found at:
https://umass.interviewexchange.com/jobofferdetails.jsp?JOBID=68335&type=7
Thank you in advance,
Jacquie Kurland
--
Jacquie Kurland, PhD
Associate Professor
Department of Communication Disorders
School of Public Health and Health Sciences
University of Massachusetts Amherst
358 North Pleasant Street, Room 307A
Amherst, MA 01003-9296
Phone: (413) 545-4007
Fax: (413) 545-0803
Email: jkurland(a)comdis.umass.edu
===========================
Position Description:
The Education and Brain Sciences Research Lab directed by Dr. Laurie E.
Cutting of Vanderbilt University in Nashville, Tennessee is seeking an
independent and motivated postdoctoral researcher. The fulltime research
fellow position is appointed through the Vanderbilt Brain Institute in
one-year intervals, with re-appointments anticipated in years 2 and 3
(contingent upon satisfactory performance during the previous year). The
successful candidate will have a strong interest in developing and
optimizing neuroimaging data management and processing, and will provide
expertise that supports our lab’s efforts to integrate neuroimaging and
behavioral data on multiple projects. The postdoc will provide
expertise to our team, and will also interact closely with the
Vanderbilt University Institute of Imaging Science (VUIIS), attending
meetings and trainings to engage in scientific exchange and encourage
cutting-edge innovation. Compensation is in line with NIH postdoc salary
guidelines.
Lab and Facilities:
We offer a challenging multidisciplinary research environment in which
we study reading (reading development, reading comprehension) using
functional and structural MRI, as well as psychometric testing. Our
laboratory is located in the highly-ranked Peabody College of Education,
and our imaging is conducted at VUIIS (www.vuiis.vanderbilt.edu) Center
for Human Imaging Research which operates 2 full-time research Philips
3T scanners, as well as a 7T Philips scanner. We conduct research under
multiple grants, with a current focus on two longitudinal studies of
reading in children and adolescents, offering opportunities for
publication and presentation at conferences.
Basic Requirements:
• PhD in Neuroscience, Biomedical Engineering, Bioinformatics, Computer
Science, Neuropsychology or related discipline.
• Some programming skills (Python, Matlab, UNIX) strongly preferred
• A demonstrated record of innovative scientific research in
neuroimaging (preferably in both fMRI and DWI)
• Strong skills in the usage of one or more common neuroimaging packages
(FSL, SPM, Afni, Freesurfer); experience with XNAT is a plus, but not
required
• Strong communication skills in spoken and written English
• Ability to work closely with an interdisciplinary team, providing
training to students and researchers
• Authorized to work in the United States
Contact Information:
For more information regarding this position, please contact Laura A.
Barquero, Ph.D. laura.barquero(a)vanderbilt.edu with any questions. If you
are interested in the position, please provide a letter, CV, and names
and contact information for 3 academic/professional references.
=============================
A postdoctoral position is available in Dr. Christine Rabinak's
Translational Neuropsychopharmacology Laboratory at Wayne State
University in Detroit, Michigan. Our research focuses on behavioral and
neural processes underlying fear learning and memory in healthy
volunteers and patients with fear-based disorders, such as posttraumatic
stress disorder. For more information about the specific projects and
areas please visit our lab website: http://www.tnp2lab.org
The initial postdoctoral fellow appointment will be for 2 years, with
potential to renew. Applicant must be a US citizen or permanent resident.
Minimum qualifications include a highly motivated individual with a
recently obtained (within the past 2 years) PhD in a relevant field
(e.g., Neuroscience, Psychology, Biology), MD, or MD/PhD, or comparable
degree. Strong evidence of technical experience in functional
neuroimaging, including strong programming skills (Matlab, C++, Python,
or equivalent programming language) is required. Experience designing
and conducting Pavlovian fear conditioning studies and/or working with
clinical populations of fear-based disorders (e.g., anxiety disorders,
posttraumatic stress disorder) is highly desirable. Candidates are
further required to have a strong record of research accomplishments and
publications, including presentations of scientific results at national
meetings and their publication in peer-reviewed journals, an ability to
work in a team environment as well as excellent oral and written
communication skills.
Duties will consist of, but are not limited to, designing, performing,
and analyzing studies that investigate the role of the cannabinoid
system in aversive learning and memory, aide, supervise, design, and
execute experiments pertaining to the lab’s area of research (emotion
and posttraumatic stress disorder). The candidate will participate in
the writing of manuscripts and grants, presenting data at national and
international meetings, and assist in the training of students. The
postdoctoral fellow will be expected to develop his/her own ideas within
the scope of the lab.
Qualified candidates should submit their CV, the names of three
references, and a cover letter summarizing current and future research
interests by email to Dr. Rabinak at rabinak(a)wayne.edu
This position is funded by a fellowship from the Office of the Vice
President of Research at Wayne State University.
Christine A. Rabinak, PhD
Assistant Professor
Wayne State University
Eugene Applebaum College of Pharmacy & Health Sciences
Pharmacy Practice
Pharmaceutical Sciences
Psychiatry & Behavioral Neurosciences
Translational Neuroscience Program
259 Mack Ave., Suite 2190
Detroit, MI 48201
rabinak(a)wayne.edu
Office: 313-577-9875
Fax: 313-577-5369
http://www.tnp2lab.org
====================================
International Research Training Group (IRTG 2150)
“The Neuroscience of Modulating Aggression and Impulsivity in
Psychopathology”
Two positions for post-doctoral fellows available
The International Research Training Group “The Neuroscience of Modulating
Aggression and Impulsivity in Psychopathology” (IRTG 2150) invites
applications for two full-time post-doctoral researchers. The start of
position is in April 2016. Applicants should have a doctoral degree (at
the time of the appointment) in one of the related disciplines (medicine,
psychology, neuroscience, biology, physics, mathematics, engineering).
Applicants should have a strong interest and methodological expertise in a
relevant area (fMRI, PET, EEG, specific analysis techniques or stimulation
techniques, neuropsychology, psychopathology) or a scientific contribution
in the relevant area of the neuroscience of pathological aggression and
impulsivity. Applicants should demonstrate successful research experience
by an excellent publication record with respect to their scientific age.
They are expected to develop and conduct their own research within the
thematic focus of the program, and be willing to assist the IRTG faculty
members in organizing and conducting the training aspects of the program.
Applicants must have a good working knowledge of spoken and written
English. Knowledge of German is not required but advantageous.
Comensuration is according to German federal regulations. Appointments
within the IRTG are limited to a 2-year maximum due to DFG regulations,
but applicants are strongly supported in seeking follow-up funding.
The IRTG 2150 is funded by the German Research Foundation (DFG), and
provides an international research and training program for doctoral
students in a network comprising the neuroscience research at RWTH Aachen
University and the Research Center Jülich in Germany, with an intense
collaboration with the University of Pennsylvania (USA). The program is
situated within the framework of the Jülich-Aachen Research Alliance
(JARA-BRAIN, www.jara.org/jara-brain).
The participating institutions are the Department of Psychiatry,
Psychotherapy and Psychosomatics, the Department of Child and Adolescent
Psychiatry, Psychosomatics and Psychotherapy, the Department of Neurology,
the Department of Biology, and the Institutes of Neuroscience and Medicine
at the Forschungszentrum Jülich. Within this IRTG, we will employ a
continuum of highly translational approaches, specifically neuroimaging
studies, as our major methodological focus, conducting behavioral,
electrophysiological and neuroendocrinological human studies. This core
concept will be strengthened by also involving molecular and animal
studies. Two research lines are pursued: First, we will investigate major
risk and influencing factors. We will focus on patients with mental
disorders as well as on healthy individuals and investigate the effects of
these influencing factors on neural networks and neurotransmitters.
Second, we aim to identify ways to modulate and alter impulsivity and
aggressive behavior by neuromodulatory (e.g. tDCS, neurofeedback, TMS),
psychosocial (e.g. emotion regulation), pharmacological means in humans
and in rodents and analyze the effects on the underlying cerebral
connectivity.
The RWTH Aachen aims to increase the number of women in areas in which
they are underrepresented, thus women are strongly encouraged to apply.
For further information please see: www.rwth-aachen.de/equality
The RWTH Aachen aims to integrate persons with disabilities, thus such
persons are strongly encouraged to apply. For further information please
see: www.rwth-aachen.de/disabilities
Please send applications including CV, cover letter and a 1-page letter of
motivation to irtg2150(a)ukaachen.de. Informal enquiries may be made to the
coordinator of the program, Prof. Dr. Ute Habel, Email:
irtg2150(a)ukaachen.de
Speakers of the program are
Prof. Dr. Ute Habel, Department of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, School of
Medicine, RWTH Aachen University
Prof. Dr. Ruben C. Gur, Department of Psychiatry, School of Medicine,
University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia
==============================
Doctoral positions at the International Research Training Group (IRTG 2150)
“The Neuroscience of Modulating Aggression and Impulsivity in
Psychopathology”
in RWTH Aachen – Jülich FZJ – UPenn.
The newly founded IRTG is a program funded by the German Research
Foundation (DFG) that starts with April 2016. In a network, the
neuroscience research at the RWTH Aachen University, and the Research
Center Jülich provide an international English spoken curriculum with
obligatory and intense exchange with the University of Pennsylvania (USA).
Potential PhD researchers within this IRTG will investigate a clinically
and societally highly relevant topic: the neurobiology of pathological
aggression and impulsivity. Doctoral candidates will learn, develop and
apply advanced brain imaging techniques including structural and
functional magnetic resonance imaging (high-field MRI and fMRI), positron
emission tomography (PET), whole-head magnetoencephalography (MEG),
electroencepaholography (EEG), transcranial direct current stimulation
(tDCS), receptor distribution and micro-structural architectonic brain
mapping.
The participating institutions comprise the Department of Psychiatry,
Psychotherapy and Psychosomatics, the Department of Child and Adolescent
Psychiatry, Psychosomatics and Psychotherapy, the Department of Neurology,
the Department of Biology, and the Institutes of Neuroscience and Medicine
at the Forschungszentrum Jülich. The program is situated within the
framework of the Jülich-Aachen Research Alliance (JARA-BRAIN,
www.jara.org/jara-brain). These and associated institutions host the
individual doctoral researchers in joint supervision of partners from the
University of Pennsylvania (Departments of Psychiatry, Neurology, Biology,
Pharmacology, Psychology, Radiology, Criminology). An extensive exchange
and rotation program for students, researchers and professors is central
to this IRTG.
Participants will be granted a (TL-13 (65%)) position for a period of up
to 3 years. The IRTG is designed to allow participants to acquire a
doctoral degree (Dr. rer. nat and Dr. rer. medic., depending on the
primary institution) within this time frame.
Applicants for the doctoral stipends must hold a Master's degree or a
German Diploma (or an equivalent degree) in a related field, such as
neuroscience, psychology, physics, biomedical sciences, be interested in
neurobiological research of aggression and impulsivity. The curriculum of
the IRTG will be in English, facilitating the inclusion of international
students. However, we would like to stress that for part of the clinical
projects with patients, German-speaking students have an advantage for
projects with patient communication (diagnostics, psychopathological
assessment). Due to the strong international orientation of the IRTG,
ideal candidates should have a sufficient command of the English language,
both in writing and orally (comparable to TOEFL, IELTS-C1). Transcripts or
degree certificates issued in languages other than English must be
accompanied by English translations.
Applications can be submitted via email and should include a curriculum
vitae along with copies of degree certificates, an English language
proficiency test (if available) and two letters of recommendation.
Applicants are required to outline their future professional plans in a
personal statement, in which they describe how their plans relate to the
research topics of the IRTG.
Please submit your application or informal inquiries to
irtg2150(a)ukaachen.de
Spokesmen of the program are
Prof. Dr. Ute Habel
Department of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, School of Medicine,
RWTH Aachen University,
Pauwelsstr. 30, 52074 Aachen
Prof. Dr. Ruben C. Gur
Department of Psychiatry, School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania
10 Gates Pavilion, 3400 Spruce Street
Philadelphia, PA 19104
=================================
A postdoctoral research associate position is available at the Infant
Brain Mapping Lab of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
(UNC-Chapel Hill). Our current focuses are to better understand the
dynamic and critical early brain development in both health and disease,
via multimodal neuroimaging analysis. The successful candidate will
support our efforts either in advancing neuroimaging analysis
technologies or in neuroscience applications. We are seeking highly
motivated individuals who have extensive research experience in
neuroimaging analysis (e.g., structural, diffusion or functional MRI)
and demonstrated academic excellence, including publications in
first-class journals and conferences. The candidate should have a Ph.D.
(or equivalent) in Neuroscience, Computer Science, Applied
Mathematics/Statistics, Electrical Engineering, Biomedical Engineering,
or related fields. Good command of programming tools including Matlab,
C++, Linux, and scripting are necessary to carry out the research work
in this group.
The successful candidate will be part of a diverse group including
neuroscientists, radiologists, psychologists, physicists,
biostatistician, and computer scientists, and will build upon the
group's extensive foundation on neuroimaging analysis. If interested,
please email resume to Dr. Gang Li (gang_li(a)med.unc.edu).
For more information, please visit: http://www.unc.edu/~gangl/contact.html.
===========================
here a permanent position at Roche in Basel for a senior PET/MR imaging
specialist with clinical trial experience (for more information s. the
provided link):
http://www.roche.com/careers/jobs/jobsearch/job.htm?id=E-3102844645&locale=…
Best wishes,
Juergen
===========================
Please find enclose a 3 years Post Doctoral position that may be of
interest.
Post Doc in data processing and databasing of large neuroimaging datasets.
The Neurofunctional Imaging Group (GIN) is a CNRS-CEA joint research
team of the Neurodegenerative Disease Institute, UMR 5293 at Bordeaux
University. The GIN is a multidisciplinary research team gathering
scientists with training in instrumentation, cognitive neurosciences,
signal processing and databasing.
The GIN is a partnering member of the MULTI-LATERAL (Multi-level
Integrative Analysis of Brain Lateralization for Language,
http://flagera.eu/?q=FLAG-ERA-call-2015-projects) project funded by the
FLAG-ERA European consortium set up to contribute to the construction of
the Human Brain Project Flagship project. This partnership aims to
identify the anatomical, functional and genetic determinants of brain
lateralization for language functions.
Within this context, the GIN offers a 3 years Post Doc / Research
Engineer position immediately available.
The core work of the Post Doc will to extract accurate structural and
intrinsic connectivity asymmetry phenotypes across a range of large
scale imaging datasets:
First, the post-doc will contribute to develop improved methods and
dedicated software to reliably and automatically measure individual
differences in lateralization for anatomy and resting state intrinsic
connectivity.
In a second phase, the Post Doc will apply the methods in brain imaging
datasets (about 10 000 subjects, including the BIL&GIN, BIG, I-Share and
UK-biobank neuroimaging databases) having genetic data available, for
the purposes of association and rare variant analysis followed by
integrated genome-level analysis with transcriptomic (lateralized gene
expression) dataand genomic gene-set analysis.
The applicant will benefit from the support of existing research in this
topic area and preliminary works in the accurate definition of both
structural and resting state asymmetry characterization together with
data management of large neuroimaging cohorts.
The qualified applicant should have a PhD (or equivalent) in neuro-image
analysis, computer science (signal and/or image processing) or related
field and a strong background / experience in neuroimaging data
processing. Applicants should have experience with tools for analysis of
neuroimaging data (Freesurfer, SPM,…) and a relevant programming
experience (Unix, C/C++ / python, MATLAB).
For further information, please contact Dr. Fabrice Crivello
(fabrice.crivello(a)u-bordeaux.fr). Salary is according to Bordeaux
University salary grid depending on applicant experience. The position
is limited for 3 years. Job location is in Bordeaux - France.
Interested candidates should send their applications including CV with
publication list and recommendation letters (names and contact
information) and a written summary of research interests to
fabrice.crivello(a)u-bordeaux.fr.
Dr Fabrice CRIVELLO
Mob : +33 (0)6 81 06 47 53
Tel : +33 (0)5 47 30 44 03
Fax : +33 (0)5 47 30 43 94
https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Fabrice_Crivello
IMN, Institut des Maladies Neurodégénératives, UMR 5293
Equipe 5 : GIN, Groupe d’Imagerie Neurofonctionnelle, CEA - CNRS -
Université de Bordeaux
Université de Bordeaux
146 rue Léo Saignat - CS 61292 - Case 28
33 076 Bordeaux cedex
http://www.imn-bordeaux.org/
=======================================
A cross-disciplinary (psychology, psychiatry, neuroscience) research
program in translational neuroscience is set to begin at the University
of Pennsylvania that will combine fMRI, TMS, pupillography,
electrophysiology, and behavioral recordings in humans as well as in
non-human primates to better understand how non-invasive neuromodulation
affects the brain and behavior in circuits relevant to neuropsychiatric
illness. The effort is headed by Drs. Yvette Sheline and Michael Platt
along with collaborators at Penn (Oathes, Gold, Kable). A strong
background in fMRI acquisition and analysis in psychology or psychiatry
is required as well as willingness to learn TMS methods and to
collaborate with NHP labs. Must be familiar with computer scripting such
as Unix, shell, Matlab, R, Python, etc. and relevant imaging statistics.
Additional background in signal processing for psychophysiological data
is a plus.
To apply, please send a curriculum vitae, a statement describing
research interests and relevant background and three letters of
recommendations, as well as relevant reprints/preprints of research
articles to: Yvette Sheline, M.D.
sheline(a)mail.med.upenn.edu
==========================
Hello All,
Marc Himmelberg will be giving a project presentation on 'Featural
receptive field mapping using fMRI' at 4pm on 25th February in B020.
Best wishes
Tony
--
Antony Morland, PhD
Head of the Centre for Neuroscience, Hull-York Medical School.
Deputy Director, York Neuroimaging Centre
Department of Psychology, University of York, York YO10 5DD, UK.
Dear all,
This is a reminder that we will be hosting MEG UK 2016 from March 21st
to 23rd. The event will follow the traditional format of a one day
workshop and a two day conference.
The title of the one-day workshop is Connectivity and dynamics in MEG.
On days two and three, each individual lab group within the UK is given
a 45 minute slot in which to present work.
If you wish to attend MEG UK, we would ask you to register as soon as
possible as we are limited in terms of space and need to finalise
numbers for catering. Even if you work at York, we would ask that you
register to let us know that you are coming.
You can register at:
https://www.ynic.york.ac.uk/events/meguk
If you have any queries, please contact meguk-2016(a)ynic.york.ac.uk
Many thanks,
Mark
Dear All,
The MSc Cognitive Neuroscience students will be presenting their projects
this afternoon. The presentations will take place in B020 at the times
below. Please come along to learn about the range of research that is going
on and to provide constructive advice and suggestions for the students.
Best wishes,
Tim
Time
Project
3.30
Non-selective “gist” processing in medical image perception
3.40
Regulating emotions towards the body in relation to neural activity and
eating disorder vulnerability in a healthy sample
3.50
Imaging the role of colour pathways in 3D motion perception
4.00
Quantifying structural changes in the human brain as a function of age
using structural MRI/DTI
4.10
Using a data-driven approach to explore how natural images are represented
in the visual brain
4.20
Measuring social attitudes with fMRI
4.30
fMRI guided state-dependent TMS of auditory cortex
4.40
What is being communicated between brain areas?
--
Tim Andrews
Department of Psychology
University of York
York, YO10 5DD
UK
Tel: 44-1904-324356
Fax: 44-1904-323181
http://www.york.ac.uk/psychology/staff/faculty/ta505/
I am looking for a PhD student or PostDoc (65%) to join my research team
at the Humboldt-University Berlin, Germany in a project on the
neurobiological mechanisms of psychotherapy and endurance exercise in
depression (starting 03/2016 for three years).
Please see details in the attachment and send your application to
stephan.heinzel(a)hu-berlin.de, the latest by January 31st, 2016.
Best regards,
Stephan Heinzel
========================
Title Postdoctoral Research Associate I (Multiple Positions)
Department Psychiatry (0717)
Location Arizona Health Sciences Center
Position Summary
The Social, Cognitive, and Affective Neuroscience Laboratory at the
University of Arizona College of Medicine Department of Psychiatry under
the direction of William “Scott” Killgore, PhD, has a postdoctoral
research associate position open in functional neuroimaging and
neuropsychological assessment. Dr. Killgore’s lab is currently funded to
conduct a functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) and diffusion
tensor imaging (DTI) study of the effects of morning bright light
treatment on sleep patterns and recovery from mild traumatic brain injury.
The postdoctoral fellow will play an integral role in all aspects of
this research project, including supervising research assistants,
writing protocols, conducting neuropsychological assessments, processing
and analysis of fMRI/DTI and behavioral data, and publishing findings in
peer-reviewed journals. Additional opportunities to work on neuroimaging
studies of emotional functioning, sleep deprivation, and social
cognition are also available.
A Ph.D. in neuroimaging, cognitive neuroscience, and/or related field is
required. Preference will be given to candidates with backgrounds in
computational methods used in neuroimaging (e.g., Matlab, UNIX, LINUX,
C/C++, SPM, AFNI, Freesurfer, FSL, TrackVis, CONN). Exceptional skills
in experimental design, quantitative methods, and statistical analysis,
and the ability to carry out independent data entry and sophisticated
statistical analyses using standard software packages (e.g., SPSS, BMDP,
JMP, SAS) are particularly desirable. The successful candidate must
demonstrate solid mastery of written English, preferably with some
evidence of peer-reviewed publications.
The College of Medicine recognizes the value of diversity of people,
thought, perspective and experience. As the sole allopathic medical
college in the state of Arizona, the UA College of Medicine values
individuals who are able to work with diverse students, trainees,
colleagues, and subjects.
Outstanding UA benefits include health, dental, vision, and life
insurance; paid vacation, sick leave, and holidays; UA/ASU/NAU tuition
reduction for the employee and qualified family members; access to UA
recreation and cultural activities; and more!
The University of Arizona has been recognized on Forbes 2015 list of
America’s Best Employers in the United States and has been awarded the
2015 Work-Life Seal of Distinction by the Alliance for Work-Life
Progress! For more information about working at the University of
Arizona, please click here.
Duties & Responsibilities
Write protocols, conduct neuropsychological assessments, process
and analyze fMRI/DTI and behavioral data.
Supervise research assistants and others.
Publish findings in peer-reviewed journals.
Additional duties as assigned.
Minimum Qualifications
Ph.D. in neuroimaging, cognitive neuroscience, or related field.
Preferred Qualifications
Background in computational methods used in neuroimaging (e.g.,
Matlab, UNIX, LINUX, C/C++, SPM, AFNI, Freesurfer, FSL, TrackVis, CONN).
Exceptional skills in experimental design, quantitative methods,
and statistical analysis, and the ability to carry out independent data
entry and sophisticated statistical analyses using standard software
packages (e.g., SPSS, BMDP, JMP, SAS).
Evidence of peer-reviewed publications.
Demonstrated solid mastery of written English.
http://uacareers.com/postings/5450http://uacareers.com/postings/7002
========================
Postdoctoral Fellowship Position in the Dept. of Neurology, Baylor
College of Medicine
The Papageorgiou/Investigational Targeted Brain Neurotherapeutics
Laboratory is seeking a highly motivated post-doctoral fellow to conduct
innovative research to study neuromodulation and neurorehabilitative
appoaches using real-time functional MRI neurofeedback along with EEG
and EMG measures.
The focus of our laboratory is three-fold: (i) elucidate the mechanisms
that guide plasticity following insult to the brain, by using
structural, volumetric, diffusion tensor imaging and functional
connectivity measures; (ii) induce functional plasticity/reorganization
of the brain by applying a targeted and individualized real-time fMRI
neurofeedback method; (iii) develop optimization neurofeedback
approaches via computational modelling.
Prerequisite is a Ph.D. in a relevant field: Bio-engineering/Biomedical
Engineering; Electrical Engineering; MR physics; Neuroscience;
Bioinformatics, Computer Science, (Bio-) Physics or Experimental Psychology.
Experience in fMRI methods and analysis is required. Preference will be
given to applicants with experience in real-time fMRI neurofeedback
methods, multivariate and univariate pattern analysis,
functional/effective connectivity, diffusion tensor imaging, EEG- and/or
EMG approaches.
The trainee will benefit from the Core for Advanced MR Imaging Facility
at Baylor College of Medicine, which includes a state-of-the art imaging
facility with three research-dedicated Siemens 3T MAGNETOM Trios.
The applicant MUST have the passion and motivation to pursue innovative
scientific research with a flexible work schedule.
Apply: Please send a pdf or word CV to Dr. Dorina Papageorgiou at
papageor(a)bcm.edu
Compensation commensurate with experience.
Baylor College of Medicine is an Equal Opportunity /Affirmative
Action/Equal Access Employer.
===============================================
Research Associate/Programmer
The Papageorgiou/Investigational Targeted Brain Neurotherapeutics
Laboratory is seeking a highly motivated research associate/programmer
to conduct innovative research to study neuromodulation and
neurorehabilitative appoaches using real-time functional MRI
neurofeedback along with EEG and EMG measures.
We examine cortical plasticity and neuromodulation in specific patient
populations as a result of neurological injury and/or disease using
real-time functional MRI neurofeedback, functional connectivity and
diffusion tensor imaging methods with the goal to neuro-rehabilitate
cortical blindness, speech, motor impairment as a result of lower
cranial nerve injury.
1) A Masters of Science or Ph.D in any of the following disciplines -
Bioinformatics, Engineering, Biomedical Engineering, Computer Science,
or (Bio-)Physics - is available in the Investigational Targeted Brain
Neurotherapeutics Laboratory of Dorina Papageorgiou, Ph.D., MHSc at
Baylor College of Medicine.
2) Scientific programming expertise in C/C++ and Matlab and/or Python
programming. Knowledge of Unix environment.
3) fMRI experience is a plus.
3) Good English communication skills
4) Excellent organizational, diligent, analytical skills. Ability to
collaborate and work with others.
The main tasks of the software developer will be:
1) Software development of real-time fMRI neurofeedback methods and
application for neuro-rehabilitation of cortical blindness and/or lower
cranial nerve injury.
2) User interface fMRI neurofeedback software development tailored for
specific patient applications
Please send a pdf or word CV to Dr. Dorina Papageorgiou at papageor(a)bcm.edu
Compensation commensurate with experience.
Baylor College of Medicine is an Equal Opportunity /Affirmative
Action/Equal Access Employer.
=========================================
Research Associate / Fellow
The Sir Peter Mansfield Magnetic Resonance Centre (SPMMRC)
School of Physics & Astronomy
The Sir Peter Mansfield Magnetic Resonance Centre (SPMMRC), University
of Nottingham is seeking to recruit a postdoctoral research fellow in
the field of ultra-high field MRI (7 Tesla) and magnetoencephalography
(MEG). This is a 2.5 year post, funded by the Medical Research Council
(MRC) to work on projects related to the development of multi-modal
neuroimaging and its application in the study of sensory systems. In
particular, funding is related to the project “Human Mechanosensation:
From 1st-Order Neurone to Somatosensory Cortex” which aims to
understand in detail somatosensory processing. The successful candidate
will apply fMRI and MEG to understand sensory processing in the human
brain and how these systems break down in disease. The candidate will be
responsible for: 1) Optimising techniques for the acquisition of
neuroimaging data and applying those techniques to both healthy controls
and patients with abnormalities in sensory processing. 2) Developing
novel methods for analysis of neuroimaging data – in particular we will
develop analysis methods for 7T fMRI to assess layers, columns and
population receptive fields and we will introduce new modelling
techniques for MEG to assess electrophysiological activity and
connectivity within and between neural networks.
This post forms part of a collaborative programme and the postdoctoral
fellow will work within a multi-disciplinary team with links within
Nottingham, Liverpool, Oxford, London, Gothenburg, Aix-Marseille, North
Carolina, Amsterdam and the NIH, USA. We expect the applicant to have a
background in physics, mathematics, engineering or a related area.
Further we expect them to have a Ph.D. and published track record in the
field of neuroimaging, in particular the development and application of
fMRI and MEG.
The University of Nottingham has been at the forefront of imaging since
its inception in the 1970’s and a rich history of novel developments
resulted in the award of a Nobel Prize to Sir Peter Mansfield. The Sir
Peter Mansfield Magnetic Resonance Centre (SPMMRC) is a world leading
laboratory working in the field of neuroimaging development, with
significant contributions in the fields of MRI and fMRI, MEG and
simultaneous EEG-fMRI. All experimental recording will take place at the
SPMMRC, which is uniquely equipped with Philips 7T, 3T and 1.5T MR
systems, MR-compatible 64-channel EEG and a 275-channel MEG instrument.
Location: University Park
Salary: £28,695 to £34,233 per annum, depending on skills and experience
Fixed-term
Closing Date: Tuesday 02 February 2016
Reference: SCI373815
Informal enquiries may be addressed to Dr Susan Francis, email:
susan.francis(a)nottingham.ac.uk.
==================================
A postdoctoral research associate position is available at the Infant
Brain Mapping Lab of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
(UNC-Chapel Hill). Our current focuses are to better understand the
dynamic and critical early brain development in both health and disease,
via multimodal neuroimaging analysis. The successful candidate will
support our efforts either in advancing neuroimaging analysis
technologies or in neuroscience applications. We are seeking highly
motivated individuals who have extensive research experience in
neuroimaging analysis (e.g., structural, diffusion or functional MRI)
and demonstrated academic excellence, including publications in
first-class journals and conferences. The candidate should have a Ph.D.
(or equivalent) in Neuroscience, Computer Science, Applied
Mathematics/Statistics, Electrical Engineering, Biomedical Engineering,
or related fields. Good command of programming tools including Matlab,
C++, Linux, and scripting are necessary to carry out the research work
in this group.
The successful candidate will be part of a diverse group including
neuroscientists, radiologists, psychologists, physicists,
biostatistician, and computer scientists, and will build upon the
group's extensive foundation on neuroimaging analysis. If interested,
please email resume to Dr. Gang Li (gang_li(a)med.unc.edu).
For more information, please visit: http://www.unc.edu/~gangl/contact.html.
=============================
The University of Liège has currently an open call for young foreign
post-doctoral researchers (BeIPD-Cofund program).
The Cyclotron Research Centre has been rather successful in getting
those grants over the last few years. Given the recent investments at
the CRC and with a suitable candidate we would have a very good chance!
The application is not (too) heavy either with only a 4 page project
proposal. The project would focus on the processing of DWI and
structural (quantitative) MRI data for a large study about sleep and
genomic interaction (data already acquired), and the development of such
methods. One idea is to build upon such "Anisotropy preserving DTI
processing" approach but other suggestions by the candidate are welcome.
Cluster processing is also planned.
Very practically:
- the CRC has a 3T Siemens Prisma, a 9.4T Agilent for small animal
imaging, and a 7T Magentom Terra is "on the way". All on site and
dedicated to research.
- candidate should have his/her Phd by the 16th of March 2016 at the
latest (and after September 2010). Strong numeral and programming skills
required (background in engineering, maths, physics, etc. preferred).
- (s)he should not have been funded/living in Belgium over the last few
years.
- 24 months duration grant, starting between the 1st of October and the
31st of December 2016.
Candidates should send me a complete CV, a copy of their Phd thesis, and
a letter of motivation by the 31st of January.
For further details, you can contact me directly by email.
Best,
Chris
Christophe Phillips, Ir, PhD
FRS-FNRS. Senior Research Associate
Adjunct assistant professor in applied sciences
GIGA in silico medicine
Cyclotron Research Centre, B30
University of Liege, Sart Tilman
4000 Liege, Belgium
Tel: +32 4 366 2316 (secr.)
+32 4 366 2366
Fax: +32 4 366 2946
email: c.phillips(a)ulg.ac.be
===================================================
Several postdoctoral positions are available in IDEA lab
(https://www.med.unc.edu/bric/ideagroup), UNC-Chapel Hill, NC.
Segmentation: The successful candidate should have a strong background
on Electrical or Biomedical Engineering, or Computer Science, preferably
with emphasis on image feature learning and segmentation. Experience on
medical image segmentation using deformable surface, level sets, and
graph cut is highly desirable. People with machine learning background
on image features and shape statistics are particularly encouraged to
apply. Strong knowledge on programming (good command of LINUX, C and
C++, scripting, and Matlab) is desirable. The research topic will be the
development and validation of segmentation methods for brain
segmentation and surface reconstruction.
Registration: The successful candidate should have a strong background
on Electrical or Biomedical Engineering, or Computer Science, preferably
with emphasis on feature learning and correspondence detection.
Experience on medical image registration is highly desirable. People
with experience on pairwise, group-wise and/or 4D registration are
particularly encouraged to apply. Knowledge on brain development and
also strong background on programming (good command of LINUX, C and C++,
scripting, and Matlab) are desirable. The research topic will be the
development and validation of 3D, 4D, and group-wise image registration
methods for early brain development and aging studies.
Atlas Construction: Candidates with experience on patch-based sparse
representation are encouraged to apply. The research topic will be the
development of atlas construction methods for infant brain images.
The successful candidates will be part of a diverse group including
radiologists, psychologists, physicists, biostatistician, and computer
scientists, and will build upon the group's previous work on medical
image analysis. If interested, please email resume to Dr. Dinggang Shen
(dgshen(a)med.unc.edu).
==============================
One postdoctoral position is available in IDEA lab
(https://www.med.unc.edu/bric/ideagroup), UNC-Chapel Hill, NC.
Imaging Genomics: The successful candidate should have a strong
background on Biomedical Engineering, Electronic Engineering, Computer
Science, or relatedly majors, preferably with emphasis on neuroimaging
analysis and genomics. Experience on brain disease diagnosis is highly
desirable. People with machine learning background on feature
representation and regression are particularly encouraged to apply.
Strong knowledge on programming (good command of LINUX, C/C++, Python,
Matlab, etc.) is desirable. The research topic will be the development
and validation of innovative methods for imaging genomics.
The successful candidates will be part of a diverse group including
radiologists, psychologists, physicists, biostatistician, and computer
scientists, and will build upon the group’s previous work on medical
image analysis. If interested, please email resume to Dr. Dinggang Shen
(dgshen(a)med.unc.edu).
===============================
Cardiff University Brain Research Imaging Centre (CUBRIC) is pleased to
announce thirteen openings for physicists / engineers in neuroimaging in
our new premises, which houses 7T MRI, 3T Connectom (300mT/m gradients),
2 x 3 Prisma, MEG, TMS, EEG etc.
The posts range from senior postdoc to full time, permanent academic posts.
Please see our advertisement in Nature Jobs for more details:
http://www.nature.com/naturejobs/science/jobs/568465-academic-faculty-and-p…
==============================
Dear all,
Further to Gary's last, the MEG scanner is not currently avialable for
booking because we have had to remove the compressor that supplies
compressed air to the MSR door. I shall advise you once we have a
working compressed air source that allows normal functionality of the
MSR door.
Ross
sorry the earlier email was sent from the wrong email address
Dear Colleagues
I apologise about the thumps and vibration in YNiC. This is due to the
piling for foundations for the new scanner. It will continue all of this
week.
You may have to consider working elsewhere and maybe rescheduling any
sensitive experiments.
MRI is not affected but is currently not available as the chiller has
failed. It will be repaired today. MEG is out of operation as the
heating has failed due to a problem within the Biocentre plant room.
This will also be available tomorrow.
I apologise for any inconvenience caused
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 : Claire Fox
tel +44 (0) 1904 435329
fax +44 (0) 1904 435356
Claire.Fox(a)ynic.york.ac.uk
We are currently advertising a PhD project entitled 'Elucidating the
impact of childhood emotional neglect on hippocampal function: a
neurocognitive and neuroimaging approach' which may be of interest to
current (or past) masters students with an interest in MRI,
psychopathology, and hippocampal research. Please see below for further
details.
Project Description:
The impact of early adversity on the risk of depression is well
recognised but mechanistically, poorly understood. Moreover, putative
models of the relevant relationships are simplistic and inadequately
tested. Rodent studies show that reduced maternal care causes a linear
reduction in hippocampal glucocorticoid receptor (GR) regulation which,
most likely via epigenetic mechanisms, is sustained into adulthood.
Reduced hippocampal GR function reduces homeostatic control of cortisol.
Cortisol excess has been shown to be neurotoxic and may underlie the
reduced hippocampal volume seen in imaging and post-mortem studies in
patients suffering from depression.
In a recent study we demonstrated a striking negative correlation
(r=-0.86, p <0.01) between the degree of reported childhood emotional
neglect and performance on a range of hippocampal-dependent tasks of
episodic memory and episodic future thinking (i.e., the ability to
imagine ones' personal future) in a cohort of current undergraduate
students. In this studentship, we will use a combination of cognitive
testing, neuroimaging (both structural and functional MRI) and an
ex-vivo measure of GR function to probe this relationship further. In
addition, structural equation modelling will be used in the development
and testing of hippocampal-dependent models of the mediation of the
impact of early adversity on depression.
In this way we aim to shed light on the neural, and ensuing cognitive,
cost of early childhood adversity, to determine whether cognitions,
intimately linked with the functionality of the hippocampus, are
especially vulnerable to the impact of early adversity and offer an
explanation as to how, and why, these early experiences have the
potential to unleash such devastation on future mental health.
The supervisory team will include Dr Sinéad Mullally
(http://www.ncl.ac.uk/ion/staff/profile/sineadmullally.html#background),
Dr Stuart Watson
(http://www.ncl.ac.uk/ion/staff/profile/stuartwatson.html#background)
and Prof Stephen Rushton
(http://www.ncl.ac.uk/biology/staff/profile/stevenrushton.html#background).
For further details and to apply online please see
http://www.findaphd.com/search/projectdetails.aspx?PJID=70308
Informal enquiries should be made to either myself
(sinead.mullally(a)ncl.ac.uk) or Dr Stuart Watson (stuart.watson(a)ncl.ac.uk).
Please note that the closing date for this application is 22nd January
2016, and is a MRC DiMeN (Discovery Medicine North) Doctoral Training
Partnership studentship.
============================
We are seeking to recruit a non-clinical research associate / fellow in
paediatric neuroimaging to join our group at the University of
Nottingham's Sir Peter Mansfield Imaging Centre (QMC Campus). The
successful applicant will lead on the structural and functional image
analysis of the CATNAP (Childhood Ataxia Telangiectasia Neuroimaging
Assessment Project) MRI dataset. This dataset comprises neuroimaging
from children with the inherited neurodegenerative condition Ataxia
Telangiectasia and healthy control children, and includes structural
images, resting state fMRI, DTI, perfusion and spectroscopic data. The
study is funded by the A-T Children's Project and Action for A-T.
The position is open to post-docs, and we would also be happy to receive
applications from researchers who have submitted their soft-bound PhD
thesis and are awaiting viva or performing PhD thesis corrections.
The post is available immediately, and will finish on 16th August 2016.
The closing date for applications is 19th January.
More information can be found at:
http://www.nottingham.ac.uk/jobs/currentvacancies/ref/MED377615
I'd be very happy to take informal enquiries about the post, and provide
further information or arrange visits as required.
Best Wishes,
Rob
(Dr Rob Dineen, Clinical Associate Professor of Neuroimaging, University
of Nottingham)
===========================
The Institute
Established in 2003, Queensland Brain Institute
(http://www.qbi.uq.edu.au/) is housed on the St Lucia campus of
University of Queensland, Australia. It is home to more than 400 staff,
including 34 group leaders, working across a range of disciplines,
focussed on discovering the fundamental mechanisms that regulate brain
development and function in health and disease. QBI has state-of-the-art
core facilities for super resolution microscopy, flow cytometry,
molecular genetics, histochemistry and cognitive testing. Access is also
available to an advanced imaging facility, including 16.4T MRI, 9.4T MRI
(with cryoprobe), 7T MR-PET and microPET/CT for animal imaging, and 7T,
3T and PET/CT for human imaging.
Over the past decade QBI has positioned itself as one of the world's
leading neuroscience research institutes. It played a key role in
contributing to UQ attaining the highest possible score of 5 for
neuroscience, in both the 2010 and 2012 Excellence in Research for
Australia (ERA) reviews, one of only two universities in Australia to
achieve this.
The Role
To goal of the lab is to determine neural endophenotype of diseases
using functional and molecular imaging. One of the focus is to
understand disease dependent functional connectome. Connectome refers to
how the neural circuits of the brain are organized and their functional
interaction. It stems from microscopic synaptic and cellular
connectivity to macroscopic cortical organization. Understanding the
brain connectome is a critical component for linking behaviour with
cellular and molecular changes. Especially, recent clinical researchers
have identified an association between brain connectome and clinical
phenotype/severity in various neurodegenerative diseases and psychiatric
disorders. However, due to the complicated disease mechanisms, whether
and how the deficit of a particular functional network is caused by
specific protein pathology, such as amyloidosis or tauopathy, or genetic
mutation is not clear.
To understand the relationship with the molecular pathology, we are
developing advanced in vivo imaging techniques (MRI, PET and optical
imaging) to track the structural, functional and molecular changes
longitudinally in transgenic mice that express specific disease-related
mutations. Correlations can then be drawn between animal behaviour,
neuropathology, neurotransmission and the neural network. There are
opportunities for highly motivated postdoctoral research fellow and PhD
student to join this collaborative project. The postdoc/student will
learn, refine and develop in vivo functional imaging in rodents to
understand how neurotransmission and functional connectome are disrupted
in the disease progression. The results will be validated by PET,
electrophysiology and optogenetics.
The Person
The applicants must have a PhD (or close to completion) in neuroscience,
biomedical engineering or related field. Applicants will have
demonstrated track records and expert knowledge in the area of MRI
physics, animal experiment and neurophysiology. Experience in functional
MRI, MRS, and programming language (Matlab or C/C++) are required.
Applicants will also have demonstrated ability to bring research to
publication, excellent organisational and time management skills as well
as a high level of written, oral and interpersonal communication skills.
Remuneration
The research fellow position is a full-time fixed term appointment up to
three (3) years at an Academic Research Level A or B with the
possibility of renewal subject to successful funding. Level of
appointment will be commensurate with qualifications, experience and
academic achievements. The remuneration package will be in the range of:
Academic level A $74,042 - $82,510 p.a., plus employer superannuation
contributions of up to 17% (total package will be in the range of
$86,630 - $96,536 p.a.).
Academic Level B- $86,853 - $103,138 p.a., plus employer superannuation
contributions of up to 17% (total package will be in the range $101,618
- $120,671 p.a.).
Enquiries
Further information regarding the project can be obtained by contacting
Associate Professor Kai-Hsiang Chuang (k.chuang(a)uq.edu.au).
To submit an application for this role clearly state the title of the
role, and use the Apply button on the UQ Jobs website – see links below
for position advertisements:
http://jobs.uq.edu.au/caw/en/job/497432/postdoctoral-research-fellowresearc…
============================
Postdoctoral Scholar Position in Multimodal Neuroimaging of Pediatric
Concussion
Duration: 2-3 years
Start date: Fall 2016 or negotiable
Salary: $50,000/yr + benefits
The Departments of Clinical Neurosciences, Psychology, and Radiology at
the University of Calgary are accepting applications for a postdoctoral
scholar with interests in multimodal neuroimaging and its relationship
to outcomes and treatment of pediatric concusssion. The successful
candidate will work with Dr. Karen Barlow and Dr. Keith Yeates on their
CIHR-funded studies of pediatric concussion, and will receive advanced
training from Dr. Signe Bray, Dr. Brad Goodyear, and Dr. Catherine
Lebel, neuroimaging scientists at the Child and Adolescent Imaging
Research (CAIR) program (see
https://www.ucalgary.ca/ach-mri-research-centre/) and the Seaman Family
MR Centre (https://mrcentre.ca/).
Dr. Barlow is an Associate Professor in Pediatrics and Clinical
Neurosciences and a member of the Alberta Children’s Hospital Research
Institute (ACHRI). Her research focuses on improving the outcome of
pediatric concussion in two ways: i) by designing clinical tools and
novel biomarkers, including imaging biomarkers (MRI, TMS and fNIRS), to
monitor outcome and treatment, and ii) by performing clinical trials
using both pharmaceutical and non-pharmacological agents. She is funded
by a CIHR Team Grant and directs a randomized controlled pharmacological
trial for post-concussion syndrome that includes the use of multimodal
imaging to monitor response to treatment (www.playgametrial.ca).
Dr. Yeates is a Professor in the Department of Psychology, and Ronald
and Irene Ward Chair of Pediatric Brain Injury. He serves as program
lead for the Integrated Concussion Research Program (ICRP), an
interdisciplinary, campus-wide initiative supported by both ACHRI and
the Hotchkiss Brain Institute (HBI). He has received substantial
external grant funding for research focusing on the outcomes of
pediatric traumatic brain injury, including a recent CIHR Foundation
Grant focused on the assessment and treatment of pediatric concussion.
Dr. Bray is an Asssistant Professor in the Department of Radiology and
scientific director of the Child & Adolescent Imaging Research (CAIR)
program at the Alberta Children’s Hospital. Dr. Bray’s research is
supported by CIHR, NSERC, and the SickKids Foundation. She uses
structural and functional imaging to investigate typical and atypical
developmental changes in the brain, and their relationship with
cognitive development.
Dr. Goodyear is an Associate Professor in the Department of Radiology
and an imaging scientist at the Seaman Family MR Centre. Dr. Goodyear's
research interest is primarily in the development of signal processing
and analysis methods for resting-state fMRI, and the application of
these methods to the investigation of neurological and neurovascular
disease.
Dr. Lebel is an Asssistant Professor in the Department of Radiology, and
a member of the Child & Adolescent Imaging Research (CAIR) program at
the Alberta Children’s Hospital. Dr. Lebel’s research is supported by
CIHR, NSERC, and NeuroDevNet. Much of her work has used DTI to assess
white matter microstructure. Specifically, her research interests
include brain plasticity in response to learning, treatment, or
intervention, and brain maturation in children with developmental
disorders such as fetal alcohol spectrum disorder (FASD) and autism
spectrum disorder (ASD).
The scholar will work with Drs. Barlow and Yeates on their CIHR-funded
studies, under the tutelage of Dr. Bray, Dr. Goodyear, and Dr. Lebel, to
examine multimodal neuroimaging correlates of pediatric concussion
outcomes. Current imaging protocols include 3D volumetric, DTI, ASL,
fMRI (task-related and resting state), and quantitative susceptibility
mapping. Applicants should have a PhD in neuroscience, biomedical
engineering, medical sciences, or other relevant discipline, and
experience with MR image processing and analysis. Applicants should
submit a letter of interest, CV, graduate transcript, and 3
recommendation letters to kyeates(a)ucalgary.ca or
Karen.barlow(a)albertahealthservices.ca.
The University of Calgary is a leading Canadian university located in
the nation’s most enterprising city. Named a cultural capital of Canada
and one of the best places to live in the world, Calgary is a city of
leaders – in business, community, philanthropy and volunteerism.
Calgarians enjoy more days of sunshine per year than any other major
Canadian city. Calgary is less than an hour’s drive from the majestic
Rocky Mountains and boasts the most extensive urban pathway and bikeway
network in North America.
=====================================
The Center of Alcohol Studies (CAS) at Rutgers, the State University of
New Jersey, invites applications for two post-doctoral positions in the
Cardiac Neuroscience Laboratory. Post-doctoral associates will become
part of an NIH-supported translational and transdisciplinary research
team led by Drs. Marsha Bates and Jennifer Buckman.
We seek a post-doctoral candidate with functional magnetic resonance
imaging (fMRI) experience to oversee neuroimaging sessions and
contribute to cutting-edge analytic approaches with our
multi-institution imaging team. We further seek a post-doctoral
candidate with clinical research experience to oversee intake and
screening assessments for a randomized clinical trial (RCT) that targets
parenting women who are receiving intensive outpatient treatment for a
substance use disorder. This new RCT assesses a brief biobehavioral,
breathing-based intervention as an adjunct to treatment as usual by
examining changes in neurocardiac signaling, BOLD reactivity, brain
connectivity, cognitive ability, psychopathology, and substance use from
pre- to post-treatment. Substantial training and publication
opportunities are available in psychophysiology, neuroimaging, and
clinical intervention within a translational science framework working
with physiologists, psychologists, neuroscientists, and computational
modelers. Opportunities exist to model and connect clinical, behavioral,
and biological level assessments within a team science paradigm.
The successful candidates will have a PhD in Psychology or a related
field with a background in addiction and research methods. Neuroimaging
experience, particularly with fMRI, is required for one position.
Clinical assessment experience, including SCID and Timeline Follow Back,
is required for the other. Some familiarity with or interest in
cardiovascular physiology and heart rate variability biofeedback is
preferred.
Application must include:
· A cover letter, no more than two pages, to demonstrate how
your knowledge and experience are matched to this position.
· A current CV of education, professional and research
experience, publication background, and the names and emails of three
references.
Please send materials by February 28, 2016 to:
Stephanie Peeters
Senior Administrative Assistant
ADDRESS:
Center of Alcohol Studies
Rutgers, the State University of New Jersey
607 Allison Road
Piscataway, NJ 08854-8001
EMAIL:
snsmith(a)rutgers.edu
===============================
A prospective, longitudinal birth mother-offspring cohort study (Growing
Up in Singapore Towards Health Outcomes; GUSTO) study provides a unique
opportunity to investigate 1) gene-environment influence on cognitive
and brain development; 2) the regulation of epigenetic memory on the
development of children’s mental health. GUSTO establishes the intense
assessment of cognition, emotional, brain imaging, genetics and
epigenetics from infancy onwards and environmental measurements, such as
maternal mental health, nutrition, social support etc. We are now
seeking researchers who are interested in mining GUSTO data at all
levels. We aim to identify new markers characterizing environmental,
genetic, and cognitive factors and hence explaining epigenetic markers
and children’s mental health. The position includes opportunities to
apply novel computational models to high-dimensional data sets and
develop expertise in 'big data' analysis in neuroscience and to work
within a highly multidisciplinary research setting that includes
expertise in bioinformatics and biostatistics.
Requirements:
· PhD on cognitive or affective neuroscience, neuroimaging,
bioinformatics, computer vision, statistics, or relevant field
· Experience on mining high dimensional data
· Good communication in English language
· English writing skill is a must.
If you are interested in the jobs listed above, please send your CV to
Associate Prof. Anqi QIU
Department of Biomedical Engineering
National University of Singapore
Email: bieqa(a)nus.edu.sg
Phone: +(65) 6516 7002
=============================
Postdoctoral Researcher – Mindfulness training and real-time
neurofeedback. Center for Mindfulness, UMass Medical School, MA USA
The Center for Mindfulness at UMass Medical has an opening for a
postdoctoral researcher to conduct research aimed at furthering our
scientific understanding of mindfulness meditation and the extent to
which real time neurofeedback can track and augment mindfulness training.
This is an exciting opportunity to participate in projects using
real-time source-estimated EEG neurofeedback in conjunction with fMRI.
We have recently identified biologically plausible brain targets of
meditation (e.g. Brewer et al PNAS 2011, Garrison Neuroimage 2013), and
are currently running an NIH-funded trial to examine whether
neurofeedback from specific brain regions associated with meditation can
augment mindfulness acquisition.
The successful candidate will contribute to these efforts by providing
analysis of current datasets and developing her/his own mentored
projects. The candidate will work in an interdisciplinary team of
physicians, clinicians and basic scientists.
The successful candidate should be creative, able to work as part of a
multi-disciplinary group with physicians, psychologists, engineers and
computer scientists, and should have excellent communication skills in
English and good writing skills. Experience with fMRI techniques and
analysis is important, and an interest in therapeutic applications of
meditation and mindfulness training is preferred.
Preferred Qualifications for this position include:
• PhD in neuroscience, psychology, biomedical engineering or related field
• Experience with fMRI analysis (FSL, AFNI, SPM etc.)
• Experience with EEG application and analysis
• Basic programming experience (C++, bash etc.)
• A record of publication and/or conference presentations
The qualified candidate could begin work as early as February 2016.
Qualified candidates should submit their CV and three references to:
Judson Brewer MD PhD (judson.brewer(a)umassmed.edu), Center for
Mindfulness, UMASS Medical School.
The Center for Mindfulness was founded by Jon Kabat-Zinn in 1979, and
now has over 20,000 graduates of its Mindfulness-based Stress Reduction
(MBSR) program (see http://www.umassmed.edu/cfm/index.aspx for more
details). Now housed in its own building, it has recently expanded to
include core research facilities to bring together clinicians and
scientists for truly collaborative basic and translational research.
========================
The Cognitive Neuroscience lab at the University of La Laguna, Tenerife,
Spain welcomes applications for a two-year postdoctoral Juan de la
Cierva position sponsored by the Spanish Government.
We are looking for a researcher with experience in fMRI. Experience with
other imaging modalities (EEG, DTI, MRS) is a strong plus. We have
direct access to an EEG lab, as well as daily access to a GE 3T MRI
scanner in the university hospital. Other imaging modalities such as
fNIRS and TMS are also available. Although the main research focus of
our lab is on the cognitive neuroscience of language, a significant
effort also involves improving analytical techniques in both EEG and fMRI.
Deadline for the position is January 29, 2016.
***An important requirement for the position is that your PhD degree is
obtained between January 2011 and December 2015.***
If you meet these requirements and want to be considered for the
position, please send your CV to Niels Janssen (njanssen(a)ull.es).
--
Niels Janssen
Cognitive Neuroscience Laboratory
Institute of Biomedical Technologies
Center for Biomedical Research of the Canary Islands
University of La Laguna
Tenerife, Spain
http://www.neurocog.ull.es/en
=====================
Postdoctoral Position in Functional MRI
University of California at Los Angeles, Los Angeles
We would like to invite applications from bright researchers for one
year Postdoctoral Fellow position starting from February, 2016 (or as
soon as possible), with the possibility for two more years’ extension,
based on satisfactory performance.
Project details
Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) has become a common
non-invasive procedure to examine task-specific brain activity and to
quantify functional connectivity at resting stage. The primary goal of
this project is to develop, optimize existing tools in the lab, and
apply them to model whole-brain functional connectivity, based on
resting stage fMRI data, and examine brain fMRI signal responses to
autonomic and other challenges using data collected from patients with
heart failure and obstructive sleep apnea.
Qualifications
A PhD in mathematics, biomedical engineering, electrical engineering,
neuroscience, or related field with background and research experience
in functional MRI-related research in humans, especially in functional
MRI data processing and MATLAB-based programming, reflected as data
based publications, is required. Experience in MRI data acquisition and
study design is also desirable. Excellent communication skills in
English are essential.
Environment
Our lab is part of neuroscience community at UCLA, the largest
neuroscience community in the nation, host a large number of
neuroscientists (>500), who provide a resource for neuroanatomic,
neuropathologic, neurophysiologic, neuropsychologic, and analytic
support. The laboratory is immediately adjacent to the Ahmanson-Lovelace
Brain Mapping Center, which provides a significant resource in
neuroimaging faculty (>28 faculty, both basic and clinical), software,
and analytic support, and there are ample of opportunities to interact
those scientists. Our lab uses a 3.0-Tesla (Siemens, Prisma) MRI
scanner, located in the proximal Department of Radiology Research
Laboratory, a unit devoted to research studies with on-site Ph.D.-level
Siemens engineers.
Appointment Terms and Salary
The initial appointment would be for one year, with possibility for two
more years’ extension, based on satisfactory performance. Salary and
benefits would be based on UCLA norms with research experience.
Application Procedure and Deadline
UCLA is an equal opportunity and affirmative action employer
(http://www.mednet.ucla.edu/), and all qualified individuals are
encouraged to apply. Applications will be accepted until position is
filled. To be considered for this position, please send your CV and a
cover letter to:
Rajesh Kumar, PhD
Email: rkumar(a)mednet.ucla.edu
Rajesh Kumar, PhD
Associate Professor
Departments of Anesthesiology, Radiological Sciences, and Bioengineering
David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA
University of California at Los Angeles
Los Angeles, CA 90095-1763, USA
Tel: 310-206-1679, 6133
Fax: 310-825-2236
Email: rkumar(a)mednet.ucla.edu
===============================
The Cluster of Excellence “Hearing4all: Models, Technology and Solutions
for Diagnostics, Restoration and Support of Hearing” at the Carl von
Ossietzky Universität Oldenburg (in collaboration with the Medizinische
Hochschule Hannover and Leibniz Universität Hannover) is seeking to fill
the position of a
Postdoctoral Research Associate in the Field of Auditory Neuroimaging in
the Department of Psychology, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences.
The position is available from 1st of May 2016 until the end of the
first funding period of the Cluster of Excellence (31st of October
2017). Payment is depending on previous experience (German TV-L E13,
full time). The position is in principle suitable for part-time work.
The successful candidate is expected to contribute to the research goals
of the cluster by participation in task group 3 "Functional
characterization of the individual" within research area A "Improving
diagnostics for better individualized treatment" (www.hearing4all.de).
Candidates are expected to have an academic university degree in the
field of psychology, neuroscience, physics or a related discipline and
have shown their ability to perform excellent scientific work,
demonstrated by the outstanding quality of their Doctorate/PhD research
and a good publication record. We are seeking candidates with prior
experience in neuroimaging techniques (e.g. fMRI, MRI, DTI), advanced
analysis methods (e.g. functional or structural connectivity) and
research experience in areas of auditory attention, audiovisual
integration or auditory plasticity. Good programming skills (e.g.
MATLAB) are of advantage. The candidate will have access to
state-of-the-art brain imaging (MRI, NIRS, EEG and MEG), and
computational facilities.
The University of Oldenburg is dedicated to increasing the percentage of
women in science. Therefore, female candidates are particularly
encouraged to apply and will be given preference in cases of equal
qualification. Handicapped applicants will be given preference if
equally qualified.
Please send your application including a cover letter, CV, list of
potential referees, links to recent publications and copies of
certificates for academic grades to Prof. Christiane Thiel, Department
of Psychology, University of Oldenburg, 26111 Oldenburg, Germany;
(christiane.thieluni-oldenburg.de). Electronic applications (one pdf
file) are preferred. The application deadline is 4th of February 2016.
--
Dr. Sebastian Puschmann
Biological Psychology
Department of Psychology
European Medical School
Carl von Ossietzky Universität
26111 Oldenburg (Germany)
phone: +49-441-798-3931
office: A7-032 (Haarentor campus)
web: www.uni-oldenburg.de/cogneuro
=======================