The birth of a child is a period of adaptation for parents that mostly entails sleep disruptions. This, together with other challenges of parenting, can lead to mental and physical health problems. Indeed, around 10-25% of fathers and mothers suffer from postnatal depression. We know little about how parents take care of the baby together at night, on a moment-to-moment basis, and if their behavior is related to their own health and to how the baby develops. Will you help us unravel this important question? In this project we will follow couples from pregnancy until the baby is six months, using small (wearable) devices that automatically register nightly baby crying, parent-baby proximity, and parents’ sleep and stress.
The Radboud University Medical Center (Radboudumc) is looking for a PhD student within the project Nightly dance – Dynamics of mother, father, and baby night interactions and sleep. This 5-year project (0.8 fte, 4 days/week) is financed by ZonMw and focused on the transition to parenthood. Innovative sophisticated analyses will tell us how night caregiving behavior looks like, how it changes over time, and whether it predicts health problems. This important knowledge will help us design better advice and prevention programs for new parents.
The project is a collaboration between Radboudumc, Radboud University, and University of Twente. The team consists of senior researchers, a postdoc and two PhD students, as well as advisors from perinatal practice and parents. As a PhD you will be part of the Donders Institute for Brain Cognition and Behaviour and the Baby & Child Research Center.
We offer a challenging position in an innovative project within a team of dedicated colleagues. Our collaboration is characterized by creativity, collegiality, teamwork, and responsibility. You will be part of a dynamic, enthusiastic, collaborative, and ambitious research group specialized in early life,
the developmental psychobiology lab.