Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Listed
-
Employer
-
Field
-
in Maastricht and Radboud University, you will conduct innovative research at the crossroads of psychology, neuroscience, and computational science. PhD Candidate: Cognitive Computational Neuroscience
-
Programme? Not funded by a EU programme Is the Job related to staff position within a Research Infrastructure? No Offer Description We are looking for three motivated and curious PhD students to join our ERC
-
at the intersection of cognitive neuroscience and developmental psychology. We are looking for a PhD candidate to join the BabyBRAIN lab . In this position, you will conduct cross-sectional and longitudinal research
-
-cognition-relationship and see yourself in the description below: Holds (or will soon complete) a Master’s degree in Cognitive Neuroscience, Biomedical Sciences, Artificial Intelligence, Computer
-
meetings; participate in the Faculty of Science PhD training program; assist in teaching Bachelor and Master’s students; co-supervise and interact with junior scientists (technicians, MSc/BSc students). What
-
later skill acquisition. This research is located at the intersection of cognitive neuroscience and developmental psychology. We are looking for a PhD candidate to join the BabyBRAIN lab . In
-
University and present your results at (inter)national scientific meetings; participate in the Faculty of Science PhD training program; assist in teaching Bachelor and Master’s students; co-supervise and
-
writing and presentation skills. At the start of the PhD, having obtained a Master’s degree in a relevant field, such as AI, mathematics, physics, (computational) neuroscience, etc.. Terms and conditions
-
or computational neuroscience, artificial intelligence, psychology or a related field. strong programming skills. experience in experiments with human participants is preferred. good analytical skills and a positive
-
programmes in research and education range from nanomaterials and biomachinery to astronomy, from mathematics to pharmacy, from neurosciences to computer science, and from molecular and evolutionary biology to