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We invite applications for a fully funded 4-year PhD student in the field of cognitive/affective neuroscience. This position is embedded in the Learning & Decision lab (PI: Hanneke den Ouden) at the Donders Institute for Brain, Cognition and Behaviour, as part of the Vidi project “Getting things done: Unravelling the neurocognitive mechanisms of adaptive decision-making”.
The overarching aim of our research is to establish the computational and neuropharmacological mechanisms of human (mal)adaptive decision-making. The focus of this PhD position will be to investigate in both healthy and psychiatric populations how disparate decision systems may act both synergistically and competitively, depending on environmental demands.
You will investigate the neurobiological basis of decision-making, using a combination of psychopharmacology, experimental psychology, neuroimaging and computational modeling. There will be a strong focus on the role of dopamine and/or serotonin and fronto-striatal circuitry. You will have the following tools at your disposal: fMRI, psychopharmacology and large-scale web-based behavioural testing, potentially combined with EEG/MEG and patient research. You will also participate in conceptually developing the framework for understanding the neurochemistry of the adaptive mind.
Additionally, you will have the opportunity to supervise MSc and BSc students in their honours thesis projects, and will benefit from the extensive training programme of the Donders Graduate School.
Essential qualities:
Non-essential, desirable skills:
Excellent candidates who only partially meet this profile are nonetheless encouraged to apply.
You will be part of the Donders Graduate School for Cognitive Neuroscience.
Are you interested in our excellent employment conditions?
Faculty of Social Sciences
The Donders Institute for Brain, Cognition and Behaviour is a world-class interfaculty research centre, and houses more than 600 researchers devoted to understanding the mechanistic underpinnings of the human mind. Research in the Donders Institute is focused around four themes: (1) Language and communication; (2) Perception, action and control; (3) Plasticity and memory; and (4) Brain networks and neuronal communication. Excellent, state-of-the-art research facilities are available for the broad range of neuroscience research that is conducted at the Donders Institute: 3T MRI systems; MR-compatible systems for recording EEG and peripheral psychophysiological measures; a 275-channel MEG system; an EEG-TMS laboratory; and high-performance computational facilities. Recently, the Donders Institute was assessed by an international evaluation committee as excellent and recognized as a “very stimulating environment for top researchers, as well as for young talent”. The Donders Institute fosters a collaborative, multidisciplinary, supportive research environment with a diverse international staff. The lingua franca of the Institute is English.
You will work within the learning and decision-making lab at the Donders Centre for Cognition. We are a small and growing research group that emphasises close collaboration and a friendly atmosphere, strongly embedded within a larger decision-making and cognitive control research community. We are occupied with questions relating to if/how specific abnormalities in fundamental cognitive processes (e.g. reinforcement learning, flexible updating, motivational and cognitive control) produce disorders of brain health. In addition to fundamental work in this area, we are also interested in how these insights can be used to refine our definitions of psychiatric disorders and dimensions. Methods available to researchers in the lab include psychopharmacology, EEG, MRI, eye-tracking and large-scale internet-based cognitive testing, with a strong focus on computational modeling of brain and behaviour.
Further information on Theme 2: Perception, Action and Control
Further information on denOuden Lab
Further information on Donders Graduate School
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