Ever wanted to bridge neuroscience, computational modelling and clinical psychology? Then this is the right job for you! The ’Cease or Persist (COPE)’ project is an ERC-funded research programme that aims to unravel the neurocomputational mechanisms of effortful persistence. As a PhD candidate, you will combine computational modelling, neuroimaging, pharmacology and neuromodulation.
The Motivation, Effort and Decision-Making (MED) lab (PI: Eliana Vassena) is looking for a PhD candidate to investigate the neural and computational mechanisms of motivation and effortful persistence. You will focus on a key part of the COPE research programme: a pharmacological fMRI study, aimed at dissociating the contribution of different neurotransmitter systems to effortful persistence. As a PhD candidate, you will work in a highly interdisciplinary environment alongside cognitive and clinical neuroscientists, computational modelling experts and clinical psychologists.
Within this project, you will conduct behavioural and neuroimaging studies, including pharmacological manipulations. You will collect and analyse behavioural, physiological and fMRI data. Computational modelling of neural and behavioural data will be a key focus. These activities will be carried out in close collaboration with the COPE team and the Motivation, Effort and Decision-Making lab. You will actively participate in lab meetings, centre meetings and activities of the Computational NeuroPsychiatry platform (CNP). As part of your PhD position, you will have a 10% teaching load and the opportunity to make a start working on your teaching portfolio for the University Teaching Qualification (UTQ).
You will join the Motivation, Effort and Decision-Making (MED) research group, which is based at the Behavioural Science Institute. The MED lab is embedded in a vibrant and collaborative environment within the Experimental Psychopathology Research Programme, in close collaboration with the Donders Centre for Cognitive Neuroimaging, where some of the studies will be conducted. We also regularly collaborate with the Donders Centre for Cognition, the Radboud university medical center (psychiatry department) and the Pro Persona Clinic within the context of a collaborative platform called ’Computational NeuroPsychiatry (CNP) Nijmegen’.
Would you like to learn more about what it’s like to pursue a PhD at Radboud University? Visit the page about working as a PhD candidate.