We are looking for a highly motivated postdoctoral research associate to join Dr David Pitcher’s research group in the Department of Psychology at the University of York. The Research Associate would be working on a project funded by the Leverhulme Trust, entitled “Disrupting the emergence of social perception from visual motion cues”. The project examines the neural processes that enable humans to see, understand and interact with the people, places and objects we encounter in the world is a fundamental aim of psychology. One of the experimentally richest theoretical approaches in pursuit of this goal has been to show that the cognitive operations performed in a particular brain area can be deduced (at least partially) by the anatomical connectivity of that area. Models of cognition constrained by neuroanatomical data can map how complex cognition functions are built on the integration of information from primary sensory brain areas. The position is for 48 months and starts on May 1st, 2025.
Based at the University of York, your role would be to assist with all aspects of experimental design, data collection, data analysis. This is a highly technically demanding project that requires the knowledge and skills of an experienced researcher. The researcher will need to be proficient in at least one of the experimental methods (TMS and fMRI). You would work closely together with Dr David Pitcher and other researchers on the project.
Interview date: TBC
For informal enquiries: please contact Dr David Pitcher on David.pitcher@york.ac.uk
The University strives to be diverse and inclusive – a place where we can ALL be ourselves.
We particularly encourage applications from people who identify as Black, Asian or from a Minority Ethnic background, who are underrepresented at the University.
We offer family friendly, flexible working arrangements, with forums and inclusive facilities to support our staff. #EqualityatYork
York is one of the most successful universities in the UK.
With world-class activity across the spectrum from the physical sciences, life sciences, and social sciences to the humanities, we have been recognised as one of the top 100 universities in the world, gaining outstanding results in official assessments of our research and teaching.