美國(guó)匹茲堡大學(xué)2023年招聘博士后職位(高級(jí)靈長(zhǎng)類動(dòng)物神經(jīng)生理學(xué))
匹茲堡大學(xué)(University of Pittsburgh),簡(jiǎn)稱“匹大”(PITT),成立于1787年,美國(guó)最早的十所大學(xué)之一,被譽(yù)為“公立常春藤”,是美國(guó)大學(xué)協(xié)會(huì)成員。主校區(qū)位于賓夕法尼亞州第二大城市匹茲堡,與卡內(nèi)基梅隆大學(xué)隔街相對(duì),各學(xué)院分布在奧克蘭區(qū)(Oakland),地理位置優(yōu)越。
Post Doctoral Associate
University of Pittsburgh
Job Description
The Schwerdt Laboratory at the University of Pittsburgh has an opening for a Postdoctoral Associate in Probing the Role of Dopamine in Mood and Movement Control in Nonhuman Primates including Models of Parkinson’s Disease. The research involves applying multi-modal brain implantable systems in non-human primates (NHPs, rhesus monkeys) to uncover the co-active molecular dopamine and electrical neural signaling underlying key decision making, mood regulation, motor control behaviors, and how these evolve over the course of learning in health and in disease (e.g. Parkinson’s disease). The Schwerdt lab previously established cutting-edge methods to look at brain activity in a new way, that is, by recording both chemical (i.e. dopamine) and electrical (spike and local field potential) neural activity using electrochemistry (FSCV) and electrophysiology, respectively, and to be able to do this over chronic year-long time scales. This position involves leading experimental design to collect and analyze large-scale neural signals (dopamine, spikes, and oscillations) made from striatum and interconnected basal ganglia regions of task performing rhesus monkeys.
This position offers opportunities for growth and expansion of skills in advanced primate neurophysiology and brain activity mapping (e.g. electrochemistry, electrophysiology, microstimulation, neurosurgery, task design), microfabrication, and systems neuroscience. The individual is expected to work as a team with the principal investigator and other undergraduate and graduate students, and laboratory technicians. The individual is expected to prepare and write high quality journal papers for peer-review and scientific dissemination, present significant research progress in scientific workshops and/or conferences, and participate in grant writing.
Candidates should hold a Ph.D. in neuroscience, engineering (electrical, bio-, biomedical, chemical, or mechanical), biology, psychology, computer science or another computational major, mathematics, physics, or other related fields (e.g. chemistry, neurobiology, etc.) and have excellent communication and interpersonal skills, organizational skills, strong work ethics and motivational drive, the ability to design and carry out research independently, and evidence of sufficient research experiences (e.g. publication record). Highly competitive applicants will have experience in one or more of the following: non-human primate electrophysiology; neuroscience; behavioral training and task design; computational analysis, modeling, and programming in Matlab; data science, statistics, machine learning or other advanced mathematical computational and analytic techniques to analyze neural data; animal handling and surgeries; and/or grant writing.