[vslist] Postdoctoral Position, Neurobiology, Harvard Med. Sch.
Richard Born
rborn@hms.harvard.edu
Thu Oct 24 12:22:00 2002
--=====================_79350710==_.ALT
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"; format=flowed
POSTDOCTORAL POSITION IN SYSTEMS NEUROSCIENCE
Visual Neurophysiology and Eye Movements in Alert Primates
The Born Lab in the Dept. of Neurobiology at Harvard Medical School is
seeking applications for an NIH-funded postdoctoral fellowship to study the
neurophysiology of segmentation and integration in the visual motion
pathways. More information on current interests in the lab, along with PDF
reprints, is available at: http://www.hms.harvard.edu/bss/neuro/bornlab/
The ideal candidate will have experience in one or more of the following
areas: behavioral training of nonhuman primates, eye movement recording and
analysis, multi-electrode recording, or reversible inactivation of
cortex. In addition, he or she should be computer literate, preferably
adept in programming in C/C++ and MATLAB on UNIX and PC
platforms. Candidates with a computational neuroscience background and an
interest in visual motion processing will also be considered. Salary will
be commensurate with experience according to the current NIH scale. Please
send a curriculum vitae, statement of research interests, and two letters
of recommendation to:
Dr. Richard Born
Assoc. Prof. of Neurobiology
Harvard Medical School
220 Longwood Ave.
Boston, MA 02115-5701
telephone: 617-432-1307
rborn@hms.harvard.edu
Harvard Medical School is an Affirmative Action/Equal Opportunity
Employer. Applications from minorities and women are encouraged.
--=====================_79350710==_.ALT
Content-Type: text/html; charset="us-ascii"
<html>
<font face="Arial, Helvetica" size=3>POSTDOCTORAL POSITION IN SYSTEMS
NEUROSCIENCE<br>
Visual Neurophysiology and Eye Movements in Alert Primates<br><br>
The Born Lab in the Dept. of Neurobiology at Harvard Medical School is
seeking applications for an NIH-funded postdoctoral fellowship to study
the neurophysiology of segmentation and integration in the visual motion
pathways. More information on current interests in the lab, along
with PDF reprints, is available at:
<a href="http://www.hms.harvard.edu/bss/neuro/bornlab/" eudora="autourl">http://www.hms.harvard.edu/bss/neuro/bornlab/</a><br><br>
The ideal candidate will have experience in one or more of the following
areas: behavioral training of nonhuman primates, eye movement recording
and analysis, multi-electrode recording, or reversible inactivation of
cortex. In addition, he or she should be computer literate,
preferably adept in programming in C/C++ and MATLAB on UNIX and PC
platforms. Candidates with a computational neuroscience background
and an interest in visual motion processing will also be
considered. Salary will be commensurate with experience according
to the current NIH scale. Please send a curriculum vitae, statement
of research interests, and two letters of recommendation to:<br>
<dl>
<dd>Dr. Richard Born
<dd>Assoc. Prof. of Neurobiology
<dd>Harvard Medical School
<dd>220 Longwood Ave.
<dd>Boston, MA 02115-5701<br><br>
<dd>telephone: 617-432-1307
<dd>rborn@hms.harvard.edu<br><br>
<br><br>
</dl>Harvard Medical School is an Affirmative Action/Equal Opportunity
Employer. Applications from minorities and women are
encouraged.</font></html>
--=====================_79350710==_.ALT--