Location: | London, Hybrid |
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Salary: | £46,732 to £50,585 |
Hours: | Full Time |
Contract Type: | Fixed-Term/Contract |
Placed On: | 20th November 2024 |
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Closes: | 13th January 2025 |
Job Ref: | B02-07873 |
About us
Applications are invited for a postdoctoral research fellow to join the Integrated Clinical-Computational Affective Research Unit (ICARUS). The unit is led by Dr Liam Mason (Associate Professor of Clinical Psychology and MRC Clinician Scientist Fellow). The post is based in the Research Department of Clinical, Educational and Health Psychology. This is a large and vibrant community where research and teaching activity aim to improve wellbeing through the application of psychological science to practice. Psychology at UCL was ranked 1st in the UK and 4th in the world in the 2023 Shanghai Ranking of World Universities. This reflects excellent links between teaching, professional training and research, the wide range of research expertise represented and the excellent opportunities for collaboration and interdisciplinary research provided at UCL. This is an excellent environment for an early-career researcher, where opportunities for collaboration and learning abound.
About the role
The role involves undertaking high quality research as part of an exciting new internationally funded research grant investigating the neural and computational basis of reward and circadian dysregulation in bipolar disorder.
You will be responsible for: overseeing behavioural, ambulatory smartphone-based and neuroimaging assessments with clinical participants with a diagnosis of bipolar disorder; conducting computational modelling and multi-level modelling analyses; working closely with the head of the lab and the other team members, and inputting on supervision and line management of current and future research assistants, PhD students and masters students.
The post is for 12 months in the first instance with the possibility of extension. Starting salary on the UCL Grade 7 scale of £46,732 - £50,585 per annum.
Please ensure you attach your CV, including a list of publications and note explicitly any restrictions to start date and/or work pat tern.
About you
We are looking for someone with excellent quantitative research skills, particularly in computational modelling and/or multi-level modelling analyses, in the intersection of affective and reward processes. with recruiting clinical participants into longitudinal studies and in using functional MRI and scripting-based languages (e.g. MATLAB, R, Python).
You will need to hold a PhD in Neuroscience, Economics, Psychology, Decision Sciences or related discipline, ideally researching reward processes. The role involves co-ordinating a large study and liaising and assessing clinical participants, so communication and organisational skills are a must.
We will begin shortlisting on 13 January 2025 and may close the advert prematurely at this point if we have appointable candidates, so please be mindful of this when applying.
What we offer
As well as the exciting opportunities this role presents, we also offer great benefits. Please visit https://www.ucl.ac.uk/work-at-ucl/rewards-and-benefits to find out more.
Our commitment to Equality, Diversity and Inclusion
As London’s Global University, we encourage applications from candidates who are likely to be underrepresented in UCL’s workforce. These include people from Black, Asian and ethnic minority backgrounds; disabled people; LGBTQI+ people; and for our Grade 9 and 10 roles, women.
Our department holds an Athena SWAN Silver award, in recognition of our commitment and demonstrable impact in advancing gender equality. We are committed to advancing gender equality within our department. You can read more about our commitment to Equality, Diversity and Inclusion here: https://www.ucl.ac.uk/equality-diversity-inclusion/
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