Dear all,
Open positions @ Brainntome Center.
http://brainnetome.org/en/recruitment.html
*Job 1: PhD Positions in Neuroimaging and Neuroscience, Beijing, China
Brainnetome Center*
*Applications Deadline: March 15 , 2015. *
*Brainnetome Center*
Brainnetome Center ( www.brainnetome.org <http://www.brainnetome.org/>)
at Institute of Automation of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CASIA) is
one part of CAS Center for Excellence in Brain Science. Researchers at
the Brainnetome Center work on a wide topics in neuroimaging and
brainnetome, such as, neuroimaging, brain networks, new neurotechnique
development, simulating and modelling, and their applications in
neurological and psychiatric diseases, to discover the molecular,
cellular, and brain network mechanisms that underlie the ability of the
brain to function.
Neuroscience is entering an era of accelerated discovery driven by the
application of new molecular, genetic and imaging technologies, which
will provide a deeper understanding of the regulation and function of
the nervous system. Significant advances in determining the molecular
regulation of nerve cell function and development will have a major
impact on our understanding of more complex areas such as behaviour,
cognition, ageing, neurological disease and mental illness. The
researchers of Brainnetome Center is to promote excellence in
neuroscience by fostering the exchange of ideas, establishing new
collaborations and augmenting partnerships that already exist within the
wider Chinese brain science and information technology communities.
*The role*
Convergent evidence has shown that most psychiatric disorders are
associated with faulty brain networks. In order to understand how the
brain works and the pathophysiological mechanism of psychiatric
disorders, it is necessary to integrate the multi-level network features
obtained with various functional and anatomical brain imaging
technologies on different scales. We have proposed a new concept of
"Brainnetome" to represent such integration framework. Our Center here
closely collaborates with researchers at Queensland Brain Institute of
University of Queensland in Australia, INSERM Lyon in France, and
Research Center Juelich in Germany to study basic theory, methodologies,
algorithms and platform of the Brainnetome at multiple scales, and their
applications in neurological and psychiatric diseases. It envisions that
the brainnetome will become an emerging co-frontier of brain imaging,
information technology, neurology and psychiatry. Some long-standing
issues in neuropsychiatry may be solved by combining Brainnetome with
genome.
Several PhD positions are available at Brainnetome Center of CASIA to
utilise neuroimaging technologies to discover mechanisms of brain
networks. These positions will be supported by CAS-TWAS President's
Fellowship Programme for PhD Candidates
(http://twas.org/opportunity/cas-twas-presidents-phd-fellowship-programme).
They involve developing neuroimage analysis methods and tools and
applying them to neuroscience and clinical problems. In this role the
students will develop skills in developing computational algorithms and
computer programming in neuroimage analysis that could be utilised in
both basic research and clinical areas.
*The person*
Applicants should meet the requirements of "CAS-TWAS President's
Fellowship Programme for PhD Candidates" and have MSc degree in one of
the following fields: neuroimaging, neuroscience, neurobiology,
psychology, cognitive neuroscience, psychiatry, neurology, computer
science, electronic engineering, mathematics, and physics. Outstanding
C/C++ programming skills in Linux are highly desired.
*Enquiries*
Please first read the Application Guide
<http://brainnetome.org/images/job/Application%20Guide.doc> for your
eligibility and then contact Professor Tianzi Jiang at
jiangtz(a)nlpr.ia.ac.cn <mailto:jiangtz@nlpr.ia.ac.cn>. In order to
complete the formal application process, please find an Application
Package <http://brainnetome.org/images/job/APPLICATION_PACKAGE.zip>.
Applications Deadline: March 15 , 2015.
*Further Information*
Application Guide at
http://www.brainnetome.org/images/job/Application%20Guide.doc
<http://brainnetome.org/images/job/Application%20Guide.doc>
Application Package at
http://www.brainnetome.org/images/job/APPLICATION_PACKAGE.zip
<http://brainnetome.org/images/job/APPLICATION_PACKAGE.zip>
*Applications Deadline: March 15 , 2015.
*
*Job 2: Postdoctoral Fellow in Imaging Genetics at Queensland Brain
Institute*
The Neuroimaging and Brainnetome Laboratory of Queensland Brain
Institute (QBI) and Centre for Advanced Imaging (CAI) at the University
of Queensland, Australia, solicits applications for postdoctoral fellow
positions in imaging genetics of the human and mice. We are looking for
an excellent and highly motivated candidate with a PhD degree in
neurobiology, genetics, experimental psychology, and neuroimaging or
comparable background. Interest and/or previous experience in/with
neuroscience, animal MRI, design and image analysis as well as wet lab
experience are a plus. The successful candidate will participate in the
multidisciplinary project involves developing transgenic mice model of
psychiatric and neurological diseases. The main focus of this project is
to address how risky genes of schizophrenia and Alzheimer’s disease
affect brain networks in the human and mice. The postdoctoral fellows will
be jointly supervised by Professor Tianzi Jiang and other Professors
(QBI) who are experts in neuroscience. As at 30 June 2014, an applicant
must not have had more than five years full-time equivalent professional
research experience since the award of a PhD. The current salary range
for the award is on a four-level scale from A$71,528.60 – A$79,708.50
per annum. Commencing salaries are based strictly on the number of full
years’ experience since receiving a doctorate. Salary scales are
reviewed from time to time.
Please contact Professor Tianzi Jiang on tianzi.jiang(a)uq.edu.au
<mailto:tianzi.jiang@uq.edu.au> for research plan. To submit an
application for these positions, please refer to
http://www.uq.edu.au/research/research-management/uq-postdoctoral-research-….
Thank you and very best
Yours
Yong Liu
www.brainnetome.org/yongliu <http://www.brainnetome.org/yongliu>
-------- Forwarded Message --------
Subject: PhD studentship available
Date: Wed, 4 Feb 2015 11:06:16 +0000
From: Steel, Karen <karen.steel(a)KCL.AC.UK>
Reply-To: Steel, Karen <karen.steel(a)KCL.AC.UK>
To: EAR-MAIL(a)JISCMAIL.AC.UK
*PhD Studentship to study the role of peroxisome defects in hearing
impairment, at the Wolfson Centre for Age-Related Diseases, Guy’s
Campus, King’s College London*
*Applications are invited for a PhD studentship funded by an award from
Action on Hearing Loss, starting in October 2015. *
**
Applicants should have (or be expected to obtain) a 2:1 or 1st class
honours degree (or overseas equivalent) in a subject relevant to the
proposed project, and should be able to communicate well in English.
The studentship covers course fees (Home/EU rate), a stipend starting at
£17,000 rising each year for three years in total, and a small
contribution towards research costs, training and conference
attendance. Course fees are available only up to the UK/EU rate, so
will not cover the fees level for students outside the EU. Applicants
should send a full CV, covering letter explaining why you are applying
for this studentship, and contact details of at least two academic
referees to Ms Brenda Williams at brenda.williams(a)kcl.ac.uk
<mailto:brenda.williams@kcl.ac.uk>by the closing date: *24^th February
2015*. Interviews will be held during the week beginning 9^th March 2015.**
**
*For further details of the group’s research, see
*http://www.kcl.ac.uk/ioppn/depts/wolfson/about/people/staff/steelkaren.aspx**
*or contact Professor Karen P Steel at *karen.steel(a)kcl.ac.uk
<mailto:karen.steel@kcl.ac.uk>*. A summary of the project is given below.*
**
Pex3 protein is required for peroxisome genesis and degradation, and
peroxisomes in turn are needed for metabolic processing of very long
chain fatty acids. /PEX3/ mutations in humans are known to cause severe
diseases that include hearing impairment, but we know nothing about the
pathological basis of this. This project involves analysing a new mouse
mutation of /Pex3/ that has been found by a large-scale screen to show
high frequency hearing impairment. The student will investigate if the
hearing loss is progressive, what underlying pathological processes
occur in the auditory system, and how peroxisomes and lipids are
affected in the mutant. The mutant allele will be manipulated using Flp
and Cre recombinases to establish whether deafness results from a local
(inner ear) effect or a systemic effect of a lack of Pex3 activity, and
to ask if adult onset of reduced Pex3 activity also leads to hearing
impairment. These experiments will guide future development of
therapies for mild peroxisome defects, which may underlie some forms of
progressive hearing loss due to mild genetic variants or due to
environmental challenges.
Professor Karen P Steel, FMedSci, FRS
Wolfson Centre for Age-Related Diseases,
King's College London, Guy's Campus,
London SE1 1UL
+44 207 848 6203
karen.steel(a)kcl.ac.uk
Researcher position (PhD student / Post-Doc level):
The Centre for Early Psychosis Studies (Head: Dr. Nikolaos Koutsouleris)
at the Ludwig-Maximilians-University of Munich, Department of Psychiatry
and Psychotherapy (Chair: Prof. Dr. Peter Falkai), under the EUFP-7
project PRONIA (http://www.pronia.eu), seeks an outstanding individual
for the development of multivariate biomarkers of major psychiatric
diseases, including schizophrenic and affective psychoses, borderline
personality and anxiety disorders. The project's aim is to construct
reliable diagnostic and predictive methods that integrate neuroimaging,
neurocognitive, genetic, metabolomic and clinical biomarkers using
state-of-the-art machine learning techniques. The salary is according
the German TV-L E13 and depends on academic level of the applicant. The
position is initially limited to one year, with the possibility to
further extend it for another two years.
Application Criteria:
The candidate should be experienced in MATLAB programming and should be
familiar with current neuroimaging processing techniques (e.g. VBM,
cortex reconstruction) and software packages (SPM, FSL, Freesurfer).
These skills are needed to further develop and extend in-house
machine-learning techniques, including unsupervised and semi-supervised
clustering techniques vector-machines and ensemble learning methods. An
important focus of the work will be the analysis of genetic data
acquired within PsyCourse (http://www.psycourse.de/) using the
aforementioned techniques.
The successful candidate will work in the coordinating centre of a
multi-centre EU Project's with a young, dynamic and multidisciplinary
team. The main roles associated with this position are not restricted to
scientific output, they include software production and project
coordination as well. Henceforth the candidate should have a flexible
and structured profile complemented by a good strategic thinking ability.
Long-standing cooperations exist with the Structural Brain Mapping Group
at the University of Jena (Prof. Christian Gaser) and the Section for
Biomedical Image Analysis (Prof. Christos Davatzikos).
Please send your application including a CV and a letter of
recommendation to Dr. Nikolaos Koutsouleris, Department of Psychiatry
and Psychotherapy, Nußbaumstr. 7, 80336 Munich, Germany or by email to
nikolaos.koutsouleris(a)med.uni-muenchen.de. For further information
concerning this position and our research group, please do not hesitate
to contact Dr. Nikolaos Koutsouleris and Carlos Cabral
(carlos.cabral(a)med.uni-muenchen.de).
Review of applications will begin immediately and continue until the
position is filled. The start date is as soon as possible.
Could you please circulate the following Nervous System and Its Disorders Grand Challenge Talk hosted by the School of Psychology at the University of Leeds on February 25, 2015.
Thank you in advance.
All the best,
Katerina
___________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
The Nervous System and Its Disorders Grand Challenge Talk, School of Psychology
Date: Wednesday February 25, 2015
Time: 3-4pm
Venue: Electrical Engineering Agilent LT (1.52)
Speaker: Dr Andrew Holmes
Chief, Laboratory of Behavioral & Genomic Neuroscience
National Institute of Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism
National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD, USA
Title: The Traumatized Brain: how modern neuroscience is identifying causes and cures for anxiety
Focus: Anxiety disorders such as posttraumatic stress disorder are now the most common of all psychiatric conditions, but remain poorly understood and inadequately treated. Revolutionary advances in modern neuroscience are revealing key pathological brain mechanisms associated with persistent anxiety, and illuminating a path towards effective new therapeutic approaches.
BioSketch: Andy did his PhD with John Rodgers at Leeds 1995-1998, following which he obtained a PostDoc Fellowship with Jacky Crawley at NIH in Bethesda. In 2004, he was appointed Section Chief with the National Institute of Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (NIAAA) and, in 2011, became Chief of the Laboratory of Behavioral and Genomic Research at NIAAA. Andy has lectured the world over, and has received numerous awards and honours for his contributions to neuroscience. At the time of writing, he has published c. 150 research and/or review articles in high impact journals and has a Google Scholar h index of 56 with over 10,500 citations to his work. He is Editor-in-Chief for Genes, Brain and Behavior, serves on the Editorial Boards of Addiction Biology and Acta Neuropsychologia, and is an Associate/Advisory/Review Editor for at least half-a-dozen other major journals. Andy regularly reviews for major research funding agencies in North America and Europe, and has served as ad hoc reviewer for more than 80 scientific journals.
_____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Dr. Ekaterini Klepousniotou
Lecturer in Cognitive Neuroscience & Neuropsychology
School of Psychology
University of Leeds
Leeds LS2 9JT
UK
Tel: +44 (0)113 3435716
Fax: +44 (0)113 3435749
The Neuroimaging Research Core at the Marcus Autism Center in the
Department of Pediatrics at Emory University, in collaboration with the
Biomedical Imaging Technology Center in the Department of Biomedical
Engineering at Emory University/Georgia Tech, is offering a full time
position as Postdoctoral Research Fellow.
Applicants should have a Ph.D. degree in Biomedical Engineering, MR
physics, Computer Sciences, Neuroscience, Psychology or related fields,
as well as research experience in MRI image and brain network analyses.
Experience with MRI analysis software packages (i.e., FSL, AFNI for
diffusion and functional MRI data analyses) and strong computer
programming skills (MATLAB, C/C++ & Bash scripts) are required.
The Neuroimaging Research Core at Marcus is currently conducting several
large-scale longitudinal infant and school-aged neuroimaging studies.
The Core has a strong interest in developmental brain changes in very
young infants (0 to 6 months) and in young children. The goal of these
studies is to understand how autism spectrum disorders (ASD) impact the
development of brain and behavior.
The applicant will be expected to (i) develop computational and
statistics methods to analyze neuroimaging data from infants and
school-aged children (in both cross-sectional and longitudinal data
sets), (ii) design and implement novel techniques for optimizing data
collection from infants and children, (iii) prepare manuscripts and
extramural grants, and (iv) collaborate with MRI physicists, social
neuroscientists, engineers, and clinicians. The position-holder will be
expected to work closely with the Biomedical Imaging Technology Center
(directed by Dr. Xiaoping Hu) and the Social Neuroscience Lab (directed
by Dr. Warren Jones) at the Marcus Autism Center.
The Biomedical Imaging Technology Center is a research center of the
Wallace H. Coulter Department of Biomedical Engineering, a joint
department of Georgia Tech and Emory University specializing in
functional brain imaging, high-field imaging, in vivo spectroscopy, and
molecular imaging. The Marcus Autism Center is a not-for-profit
organization dedicated to the diagnosis and treatment of children with
Autism Spectrum Disorders (ASD). It is the country’s largest center for
clinical care of children and adolescents with ASD, with more than 5,000
unique children and their families served each year. The Center is
also one of the national hubs of science in the field of developmental
disabilities, designated by NIH as an Autism Center of Excellence.
Programs range from social and behavioral neuroscience, to molecular
genetics and model systems, to the augmentation of community resources
and community-viable treatments.
The position is available immediately and the initial appointment is for
one year. Renewal is expected if progress is satisfactory. Emory
University School of Medicine offers competitive benefits and salary
package in line with NIH guidelines and has been ranked high as one of
the “Best Places to Work for Postdocs”. Interested candidates should
email to Dr. Longchuan Li (lli36(a)emory.edu <mailto:lli36@emory.edu>,
please include the word “POSTDOC” in the subject of the email), with a
cover letter and CV. Qualified candidates will be asked to have 3
letters of reference forwarded to Dr. Li.
*Related publications:*
Jones, W., and A. Klin. "Attention to eyes is present but in decline in
2-6-month-old infants later diagnosed with autism." /Nature/ 504.7480
(2013): 427-431.
Shultz, Sarah, Ami Klin, and Warren Jones. "Inhibition of eye blinking
reveals subjective perceptions of stimulus salience." /Proceedings of
the National Academy of Sciences/ 108.52 (2011): 21270-21275.
Li, Longchuan, et al. "Mapping putative hubs in human, chimpanzee and
rhesus macaque connectomes via diffusion tractography." /Neuroimage/ 80
(2013): 462-474.
Li, Longchuan, et al. "The effects of connection reconstruction method
on the interregional connectivity of brain networks via diffusion
tractography." /Human brain mapping/ 33.8 (2012): 1894-1913.
Craddock, R. Cameron, et al. "Disease state prediction from resting
state functional connectivity." /Magnetic resonance in Medicine/ 62.6
(2009): 1619-1628.
University of Ontario Institute of Technology's (UOIT) Faculty of Social
Science and Humanities and Office of Graduate Studies are pleased to
announce the new M.Sc. and Ph.D. programs in Forensic Psychology.
Graduate students in these programs will have the opportunity to engage
in cutting-edge research and coursework on the application of psychology
to the justice system.
Specifically, they will be able to study topics, such as:
- the antisocial personality and psychopathy
- domestic violence
- eyewitness identifications
- geographic profiling
- investigative interviewing
- juvenile offenders
- lie detection
- sex offenders
- wrongful conviction
The M.Sc. and Ph.D. programs in Forensic Psychology are unique. These
programs are situated in an interdisciplinary Faculty and at a
university that emphasizes applied, interdisciplinary, collaborative
research. Students, therefore, have the opportunity to learn from
scholars from a variety of disciplines, such as criminology, legal
studies, other social sciences, forensic science, and neuroscience.
Exceptional applicants will have the exclusive option to be admitted
directly into the five-year Ph.D. program without first having to
complete a master’s degree. The program offers a strong orientation in
the social and biological sciences and is a good fit for students
interested in academic and applied (non-clinical) psychological careers.
The programs are situated in UOIT’s downtown Oshawa location. Classrooms
and laboratory facilities are new and spacious. Police departments,
mental health facilities, hospitals, addiction centres, and a courthouse
are all in close proximity to the campus. Students will be
well-positioned to conduct research with these institutions and
organizations, and gain practical skills that will facilitate employment
upon graduation.
The application deadline for Fall 2015 is March 1, 2015. Interested
students are invited to contact gradstudies(a)uoit.ca for additional
information.
All,
The next YNiCScienceCommitteemeeting will take place on Thursday, 5th
February
at 3pm.
The meeting will last for less than 1hr and, for the convenience of
users, will be held in Psychology, seminar room PS/B/002.
YNiC users are encouraged to attend. This meeting is a key mechanism by
which YNiC can support the needs of users. If you would
like to raise an issue at the meeting, please email the Chair of Science
Committee, <beth.jefferies(a)york.ac.uk
<mailto:beth.jefferies@york.ac.uk>> so that your item can tabled.
The agenda and minutes from the last meeting are attached.
With very best wishes,
Jill
--
Jill Hurst
PA to Gary Green MA DPhil BM BCh FRSA FSB
Director - York Neuroimaging Centre
Professor of Neuroimaging and Human Neuroscience
Telephone: 01904 43 5329
Fax: 01904 43 5356
UNIVERSITY OF YORK
DEPARTMENT OF PSYCHOLOGY
Research Associate
Ref: 4053
The Department of Psychology at the University of York is seeking a full
time Research Associate to work on a project entitled ‘Assessing visual
cortex in candidates for retinal prosthetics’. The project will use MRI
methods to measure changes in the function and structure of human visual
cortex in patients with visual loss resulting from age-related macular
degeneration before and after implantation with retinal prosthetics. It
is funded by the Wellcome Trust through the Centre for Chronic Diseases
and Disorders (C2D2) at the University of York.
The successful candidate will design and run neuroimaging experiments in
patients using MRI, fMRI and magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS),
present findings at meetings and prepare manuscripts for submission to
leading journals. The work will be based at the University of York,
supervised by Dr Heidi Baseler and Prof Tony Morland, in collaboration
with Profs Paulo Stanga (Manchester), Ione Fine (U of Washington), Geoff
Boynton (U of Washington), Dr Victoria Allgar (York) and Second Sight
Medical Products, Inc. (California).
Ideally, candidates will have a PhD in vision science, neuroimaging,
neuroscience, experimental psychology, medicine or related area at the
time of taking up the appointment. However, applicants without a PhD,
but with relevant research experience in vision science and/or
neuroimaging will be considered. While the post is in the Department of
Psychology, those with qualifications in other disciplines – such as
Physics, Maths, Computer Science, Engineering or Medicine - will be
considered for the post. Experience in human neuroimaging in
techniques such as structural MRI, fMRI and MRS will be particularly
valuable, but applications from those with experience in only one of
these areas will be considered. Experience publishing in high profile,
peer-reviewed journals is desirable. As this study involves working with
macular degeneration patients, experience with similar patients or other
sensitive groups with visual impairment would also be helpful.
Informal enquiries can be made to Dr Heidi Baseler (Email:
heidi.baseler(a)york.ac.uk <mailto:heidi.baseler@york.ac.uk>; Tel: +44 (0)
1904 322862) or Professor Antony Morland (Email:
antony.morland(a)york.ac.uk <mailto:antony.morland@york.ac.uk>; Tel: +44
(0) 1904 322860). General information about the department is available
at http://www.york.ac.uk/psychology.
The salary is £30,434 a year. The vacancy is full time and the hours of
work are 37 per week. The appointment is available immediately until 31
January 2017.
Closing date: Midnight on Friday 27 February 2015.
For further information and to apply on-line, please visit our website:
https://jobs.york.ac.uk
The University of York is committed to promoting equality and diversity.
The Department of Psychology holds an Athena Swan Silver Award,
demonstrating a commitment to supporting women in science.
--
Dr Heidi A. Baseler
Lecturer in Imaging Sciences
Department of Psychology
University of York
Centre for Neuroscience
Hull York Medical School
York YO10 5DD
UK
Tel: +44 (0)1904 322862
Email: heidi.baseler(a)york.ac.uk <mailto:heidi.baseler@york.ac.uk>
Email disclaimer: http://www.york.ac.uk/docs/disclaimer/email.htm
Dear Users
This Thursday (from 4.15 pm in B020), Gary Green will give a talk on
"Update on Hyperpolarisation: what, how and why".
Please note the slightly later start time of 4.15 pm.
Everyone is welcome to attend and refreshments will be available after
the seminar.
Best wishes
Rebecca
--
************************************************************************
Dr. Rebecca E. Millman
Science Liaison Officer
York Neuroimaging Centre
The Biocentre
York Science Park
Heslington
YO10 5DG
Tel: +44 (0) 1904 567614
Fax: +44 (0) 1904 435356
PhD position
at the intersection between social neuroscience and machine learning
"Brain networks of social interaction across connectivity types"
The Human Brain Project leverages authentically interdisciplinary
neuroscience. In an innovative approach, we will investigate the
neurobiological network architecture underlying the entire spectrum of
social-interaction skills, including emotion, perspective-taking, and
empathy. We target social processes in the brain because they most
clearly set human beings apart from other species (TEDx talk:
http://bit.ly/VJES2Q). Given the challenging nature of social
cognition, we will capitalize on data-driven methods that learn
patterns in four different types of brain connectivity data with a
minimum of a-priori assumptions. This goal will necessitate close
collaboration between the neuroimaging methods group in Paris, France,
and the cognitive neuroscience group in Düsseldorf/Jülich, Germany.
Completion of this PhD program allows you to become part of the badly
needed, new generation of computationally trained imaging
neuroscientists.
What you would work on
- Work on questions that matter with multivariate statistical tools
applicable beyond imaging neuroscience, in teams that are
knowledgeable, passionate, and fun.
- We aim at the characterization of the neurobiology of social
cognition as a whole. This includes both low-level (e.g. face
processing) as well as high-level (e.g. Theory of Mind) aspects. We
will perform a variety of connectivity and data-mining approaches.
- Aimed at multi-modal connectivity characterization, the project will
involve 1) meta-analytic functional connectivity (MACM), 2)
resting-state functional connectivity (RSFC), 3) structural covariance
(SCOV), and 4) diffusion tensor imaging (DTI).
- All methods are established, making this position an excellent
opportunity to learn various approaches for the analysis of structural
and functional neuroimaging data
- This will allow for a comprehensive neurobiological model of social
interaction processes in healthy humans that is cross-validated across
methods
What we expect
- High motivation for inter-disciplinary challenges
- an analytical, problem-solving mindset
- MSc or equivalent in computer science, physics, biomedical
engineering, psychology, medicine, biology (technical background is
strongly preferred)
- Talent with computers, programming experience (especially in Python)
is strongly preferred
- Experience in MRI analysis (SPM, FSL) is preferred
- Fluent in written+oral English language
- Geographic mobility: first part of the PhD will be in Paris, second
part will be in Düsseldorf/Jülich
What we provide
We guarantee a three-year PhD position, funded by the German Research
Foundation (DFG). The position is available immediately. Applications
will be considered until the position is filled. Payment will
correspond to salary grade 13/2 of the German Collective Bargaining
Agreement for the Civil Services (TVöD).
Application
Send CV, motivation letter, and contact details of two academic referees to
Dr. Danilo Bzdok
danilobzdok(a)gmail.com
Parietal Group
Neurospin
Commissariat à l’énergie Atomique et Aux Énergies Alternatives (CEA) à Saclay
Paris, France
Brain Network Modelling Group
Institute for Neuroscience and Medicine 1
Research Centre Jülich
Jülich, Germany
Cognitive Neuroscience Group
Institute of Clinical Neuroscience and Medical Psychology
Heinrich-Heine University Düsseldorf
Düsseldorf, Germany