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<div class=""><b class="">Post-doctoral fellowship in Neurodevelopment</b></div>
<div class=""><p class="MsoNormal">The Stanford Wu Tsai Neuroscience Institute’s team on Neurodevelopment is seeking a post-doctoral fellow to work on a project whose goal is to understand how the interplay between structural development, functional development and experience
shape brain computations at the neural level. The Neurodevelopment team brings together seven Stanford labs whose expertise spans human and non-human primate neuroscience and state-of-the art computational modeling. A central part of the effort is to use advanced
structural imaging approaches to quantitatively measure tissue properties in developing infants and to combine these measurements with source-imaged measurements of visual system functioning. The position will bridge the the Stanford Vision and Neuro-Development
Lab, directed by Dr. Anthony Norcia (<a href="http://svndl.stanford.edu/" class="">svndl.stanford.edu</a>) and the Stanford Vision and Perception Neuroscience Lab (<a href="http://vpnl.stanford.edu/" class=""><span class="" style="color: windowtext;">vpnl.stanford.edu</span></a>),
directed by Dr. Kalanit Grill-Spector.</p><p class="MsoNormal"><o:p class=""></o:p></p><p class="MsoNormal">A requirement of the position is prior research experience in imaging-based EEG/MEG source-localization. Experience in structural or functional MRI is desirable. Prior experience in brain development is desirable, but not a requirement.
The position is for an initial appointment of one year, renewable for a second year contingent on progress.</p><p class="MsoNormal">Send a CV, statement of interest and the names of at least two academic references to <a href="mailto:kgs@stanford.edu" class=""><span class="" style="color: windowtext;">kgs@stanford.edu</span></a> and <a href="mailto:amnorcia@stanford.edu" class=""><span class="" style="color: windowtext;">amnorcia@stanford.edu</span></a> with
“Neurodevelopment post-doc” in the subject line.</p>
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Anthony M. Norcia<br class="">
Professor (Research)<br class="">
Department of Psychology<br class="">
Stanford University<br class="">
Office: Room 328, Jordan Hall<br class="">
Phone: +1 650-725-2438<br class="">
<a href="https://svndl.stanford.edu/" class="">https://svndl.stanford.edu/</a></div>
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