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PhD position in Cognitive Neuroscience
Department:
Department of Psychology at the University of Zurich (Switzerland),
Methods of Plasticity Research (MailScanner has detected a possible fraud attempt from "secure-web.cisco.com" claiming to be http://www.psychology.uzh.ch/en/chairs/plafor.html)
Position:
PhD student (salary 54’000 USD/year)
Description of UZH unit:
Our lab develops novel methodological approaches to study variations in
cognitive performance across the lifespan and along the continuum from healthy
to pathological functioning. Specifically, we investigate the potential for
plasticity, mechanisms for stabilization and compensation across the lifespan.
For this, we acquire and analyze multimodal data sets, such as structural MRI, diffusion
weighted data (DWI), simultaneous EEG and eye-tracking as well as behavioral
data. From these rich data sets, we extract multivariate parameters and apply
state-of-the-art methods, such as machine learning, functional network
modelling, and longitudinal analyses.
Responsibilities:
The successful candidate
will work on the Synapsis-foundation funded research project “Real-life
activity tracking as pre-screening tool for early stages of Alzheimer disease”.
The aim of the project is to investigate whether real-life activity
measures, derived from wearable technology (e.g. GPS and accelerometer data), are sensitive to identify early
stages of Alzheimer’s disease. Further, we aim to provide evidence that these real-life
activity measures are associated with current AD biomarkers (i.e. high Amyloid
level and brain atrophy).
The student will be expected to disseminate study results in peer
reviewed journals, and to supervise Master’s students. The candidate will work
in the team of Prof. Nicolas Langer, who is also part of the Neuroscience
Center Zurich (ZNZ) (MailScanner has detected a possible fraud attempt from "secure-web.cisco.com" claiming to be https://www.neuroscience.uzh.ch/en.html), which offers a renowned international PhD programme in
Neuroscience. The candidate will work closely with the Institute for
Regenerative Medicine (MailScanner has detected a possible fraud attempt from "secure-web.cisco.com" claiming to be https://www.irem.uzh.ch/en.html), Geographic Information Systems (MailScanner has detected a possible fraud attempt from "secure-web.cisco.com" claiming to be https://www.geo.uzh.ch/en/units/gis.html), University Research Priority Programme from the
University of Zurich “Dynamics of Healthy Aging” (MailScanner has detected a possible fraud attempt from "secure-web.cisco.com" claiming to be https://www.dynage.uzh.ch/en.html), and the Department of Computer Science at the ETH
Zurich (MailScanner has detected a possible fraud attempt from "secure-web.cisco.com" claiming to be https://www.systems.ethz.ch/).
Workload %:
80 - 100%
Qualifications:
·
MSc degree in
a field related to cognitive neuroscience (e.g., cognitive neuroscience,
(neuro-)psychology, computer science, biomedical or electrical engineering)
·
Deep knowledge
in data science (time-series data processing, feature engineering and analysis)
· Proficiency in programming (in Python, Matlab or R) is a
must
· Knowledge in mobile and wearable digital technologies is
desirable
· Experience with amyloid PET imaging and/or structural MRI
analyses are a plus
· Training in machine learning is a plus
·
Excellent
verbal and written English skills
Language requirements:
English
We offer:
·
To work in a
team of highly motivated young researchers who are passionate about
neuroscience, psychology and computer science
·
A very
competitive salary (54’000 USD/year) and generous social benefits
·
Employment 3
years with the possibility of extension
·
Generous
support for professional travel and research needs (~3’000 USD/year)
·
An inspiring
work environment within the Department of Psychology and the University of
Zurich and part of the Neuroscience Center Zurich (ZNZ) with many high-caliber
collaborations (Department of Computer Science (ETH Zurich; Ce Zhang),
Institute for Regenerative Medicine (UZH; Prof. Christoph Hock), Geographic
Information Systems (UZH; Prof. Robert Weibel)
·
The
opportunity to live in Zurich, one of the world’s most attractive cities
Please visitMailScanner has detected a possible fraud attempt from "secure-web.cisco.com" claiming to be
https://www.pa.uzh.ch/en/Willkommen-an-der-UZH.html for further information.
This position opens on:
1.6.2022 (starting date)
More information:
Prof. Nicolas Langer, n.langer@psychologie.uzh.ch
To be considered please stick to the following application format:
·
CV including
publication list and contact details of two referees (max. 3 pages)
·
Statement
describing motivations, personal qualifications and research interests (max. 2
pages)
·
Save
application in one single pdf file with the file name “Methlab_[SURNAME]_[name].pdf”
·
Send
application by email to: n.langer@psychologie.uzh.ch
Applications will be considered until the position is filled (ideally
submit your application before 31st of March 2022).
Description of the Project:
Real-life activity tracking as pre-screening
tool for early stages of Alzheimer disease
Alzheimer's disease (AD) accounts
for the majority of all dementia cases and represents a major and rapidly
growing burden to the healthcare and economical systems. The current state of
research indicates that therapies need to be administered as early as possible.
Therefore, there is an urgent need for accelerating biomarker discovery for
early stages of AD. Importantly, evidences suggest that neurodegenerative
changes precede clinical manifestations of AD by 20-30 years. However,
prevailing potential biomarkers for early stages of AD diagnosis, including
genetic testing, molecular examination of CSF, structural MRI and PET imaging,
are highly limited as they can only be applied to relatively small sample sizes
due to their excessive costs and invasive nature. This prevents their usage in
large epidemiological studies; yet such study designs are imperative for
identifying the intra-individual progression from healthy ageing to AD. Thus,
novel non-invasive and inexpensive biomarkers are urgently required to be
administered at large scale with the aim to identify individuals with
indications for early stages of AD. These identified subjects could then be
referred to undergo more cost-intensive examinations with the currently
available biomarker techniques to achieve the desired diagnostic accuracy.
Mobile and wearable digital technologies have an unprecedented potential and
could close this current gap as they permit abundant, continuous longitudinal
data acquisition at low costs to investigate intra-individual changes as early
markers of AD. In this project, we will investigate whether activity measures,
derived from GPS and accelerometer data, are sensitive to identify early stages
of AD (i.e. mild neurocognitive disorder due to AD). Further, we aim to provide
evidence that real-life activity measures are associated with current AD
biomarkers (i.e. high Amyloid level and brain atrophy). Because our long-term
vision is to develop a smartphone application that is able to identify
intra-individual trajectories in healthy adults to establish the transition
point to mild neurocognitive disorder due to AD as early as possible, we will
examine the sensitivity of the real-life activity measures for intra-individual
changes. Therefore, the present proposal serves as a proof-of-concept to
address the prerequisites for real-life activity tracking as a pre-screening
assessment tool to identify potential mild neurocognitive disorder patients.