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
-
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
-
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
-
successful completion of the PhD thesis within the next three years is to be expected. A PhD training programme is part of the agreement and the successful candidate will be enrolled in the Graduate School
-
programme Is the Job related to staff position within a Research Infrastructure? No Offer Description Do you enjoy working at the interface between behaviour, ecology, and evolution? Then you might be the PhD
-
employee benefits, you will receive a fully funded PhD position and you will be offered a course program tailored to your needs and the research team. The gross salary for the first year is € 3.059,- per
-
working memory contents held within. Second, we will use computational spiking-neuron models to explain the results of the experiments and implement the neural mechanisms responsible. These models will also
-
three years is to be expected. A PhD training programme is part of the agreement and the successful candidate will be enrolled in the Graduate School of Science and Engineering. The preferred starting
-
three years is to be expected. A PhD training programme is part of the agreement and the successful candidate will be enrolled in the Graduate School of Science and Engineering. The preferred starting
-
publish it as your PhD thesis. Your team Your WUR supervisors will be Dr. Paul Smeets and Prof. Dr. Ciarán Forde (Sensory Science and Eating Behaviour chair group). Dr. Davide Risso, external research