Month: August 2019

Call for Seed Grant Applications: Due 10/1

The Connecticut Institute for the Brain and Cognitive Sciences (CT IBACS) is pleased to announce a new call for applications to its seed grant fund. Full details (and forms for the required letter of intent) can be found on the Institute website.

 The seed fund is intended to fund activities in the Brain and Cognitive Sciences (broadly construed) that are likely to lead to applications for external funding, or which otherwise contribute to the mission of the Institute. Successful applications will typically involve collaborations that require expertise across laboratories and traditional disciplinary boundaries. The Institute does not usually fund research that might normally be considered to fall within the scope of a single lab or discipline.

Applications for small grants (<$10,000) can be submitted at any time; applications in excess of $10,000 should be submitted by October 1st

Please submit letters of intent as soon as possible, and at least 2 weeks prior to the seed grant application deadline, to allow time for review and feedback.

The Institute also invites applications for affiliate memberships.

Doctorate and Post-Doctorate Positions

 A two year postdoctoral research fellowship is available within the Super Linguistics research group, in the department of Linguistics and Scandinavian Studies, University of Oslo:<https://www.jobbnorge.no/en/available-jobs/job/169242/post-doctoral-research-fellowship-in-linguistic-explorations-beyond-language>

Application deadline: September 20th 2019.

Of specific interest are interdisciplinary proposals that combine formal linguistic approaches with approaches from areas such as (but not limited to) musicology, psychology, philosophy, primatology, cognitive science, human movement science, robotics, or informatics.

Note that it is possible to apply for this position with a PhD from linguistics, philosophy, musicology, psychology, biology (ethology), cognitive science, human movement science, robotics, informatics, or other relevant field. 
 
______________________________________________________________________________
 
 *HAMBURG*
    
    DOCTORAL POSITION – in English; German not required
    
    https://nam01.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.uni-hamburg.de%2Fuhh%2Fstellenangebote%2Fwissenschaftliches-personal%2Ffakultaet-psychologie-und-Bewegungswissenschaft%2F31-08-19-447-en.pdf&amp;data=02%7C01%7Ccrystal.mastrangelo%40uconn.edu%7C7cccb93a253f443879ea08d722806449%7C17f1a87e2a254eaab9df9d439034b080%7C0%7C0%7C637015808165908108&amp;sdata=hPvAaOoFWNlgNDoVXuG8a%2Fi7bhXeX4QOqvy5aNPrtGE%3D&amp;reserved=0
    
    
    POSTDOCTORAL POSITION – in English; German not required
    
    https://nam01.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.uni-hamburg.de%2Fuhh%2Fstellenangebote%2Fwissenschaftliches-personal%2Ffakultaet-psychologie-und-Bewegungswissenschaft%2F31-08-19-435-eng.pdf&amp;data=02%7C01%7Ccrystal.mastrangelo%40uconn.edu%7C7cccb93a253f443879ea08d722806449%7C17f1a87e2a254eaab9df9d439034b080%7C0%7C0%7C637015808165908108&amp;sdata=KlhzGQIRTPoMJhfZ8kRRu%2BWHEz7GmErJj1Cttj6i1kk%3D&amp;reserved=0
    

CogSci Colloquium: Marjorie Solomon

The Cognitive Science Colloquium Series is proud to present Marjorie Solomon, Professor and the Oates Family Endowed Chair in Lifespan Development in the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, and the MIND Institute at UC Davis

Friday, September 20th, 4pm, Oak 117

Dr. Solomon will provide a talk entitled Executive Control in Children, Adolescents, and Adults with Autism Spectrum Disorder: Behavioral and Neural Mechanisms”

Abstract: Many individuals with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) exhibit executive control deficits, meaning that they fail to maintain appropriate task context representations so they can inhibit impulsive responding, behave flexibly, and thereby effectively pursue their goals. Although individuals with typical development are thought to experience significant maturation of executive control processes during adolescence, those with ASD are thought to exhibit executive control impairments that persist into adolescence and young adulthood and are associated with clinically significant difficulties in social and adaptive functioning, and attention deficit, internalizing, and ASD symptoms. Given the challenges inherent in the transition to adulthood, it is critical to better understand the precise nature and development of executive control deficits in those with ASD, and their associations with behavior. This talk will briefly review behavioral and neuroimaging studies of executive control in ASD, and present new neuropsychological and functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) results from the first wave of a large longitudinal cohort sequential study of individuals with ASD and typical development ages 12-22 years. We seek to clarify the neural signatures of executive control deficits in those with ASD and to investigate how the development of executive control impacts the transition to adulthood in these individuals.

If you are interested in meeting with Dr. Solomon during the day, and/or coming to dinner Friday night, please contact Dr. Naigles: letitia.naigles@uconn.edu

Post-doc Position Available at the University of California San Diego

Postdoc Position – Corey Miller Lab

 The Miller lab at the University of California San Diego [http://millerlab.ucsd.edu] is seeking highly motivated post-doctoral fellows to participate in research program aimed at elucidating the neural basis of spatial navigation and memory in primate brain.These experiments build on our recent identification of place cells and theta activity in marmoset hippocampus during free-navigation to further explicate spatial encoding and memory in the medial temporal lobe.  

 The positions are funded through a new NIH R01 grant and are available immediately. Salaries will be based on experience and the NIH post-doctoral scale.  Candidates should have a strong scientific background in systems and/or computational neuroscience.  Individuals with expertise in neurophysiological recordings in behaving animals (in primate or non-primate models), molecular technologies and/or computational analysis are particularly encouraged to apply.

For more information or to apply for the position, please contact corymiller@ucsd.edu

Applicants should send a CV, brief statement of interest and a list of 2 references.