[visionlist] PhD Position: Predictive Processing in the Sensory Brain (Norwich, UK)
Fraser Smith (PSY - Staff)
Fraser.Smith at uea.ac.uk
Thu Oct 25 04:35:48 -05 2018
Dear all
I am looking to recruit a new PhD student for autumn 2019 start date to work on neuroimaging experiments (fMRI, EEG) investigating predictive processing in the sensory brain.
Project description
How does the brain process sensory information? Does it merely register the sensory input originating from say the eyes? Or does it rather use our prior experience to actively predict what objects are present in the world? The current project will use behavioural and neuroimaging techniques (fMRI and EEG) to test whether Predictive Processing accounts for high-level effects occurring in early sensory brain areas (e.g. Primary Visual Cortex - V1) under conditions of visual occlusion (e.g. when viewing a face with the eyes hidden from view, early visual areas contain information about the hidden face region). There is also the potential to conduct layer-specific fMRI at 7T and/or MEG as part of the project through existing high-profile collaborations. The results of these studies will have significant implications both for our basic understanding of how the brain processes sensory information and also for a range of populations where Predictive Processing is thought to be impaired (e.g. Autism, Psychosis).
See:
https://www.jobs.ac.uk/job/BNQ289/phd-studentship-predictive-processing-in-the-sensory-brain
https://www.findaphd.com/search/ProjectDetails.aspx?PJID=101669
Fraser Smith
Lecturer
School of Psychology
University of East Anglia
01603 591676
https://frasersmithresearch.com/
https://www.uea.ac.uk/psychology/people/profile/fraser-smith#research
University of East Anglia - School of Psychology
Start date: 1/10/2019
Closing date: 20/1/2019
No. of positions available: 1
Hours: Either full-time or part-time
Supervisor: Dr Fraser Smith
Project description
How does the brain process sensory information? Does it merely register the sensory input originating from say the eyes? Or does it rather use our prior experience to actively predict what objects are present in the world? The current project will use behavioural and neuroimaging techniques (fMRI and EEG) to test whether Predictive Processing accounts for high-level effects occurring in early sensory brain areas (e.g. Primary Visual Cortex - V1) under conditions of visual occlusion (e.g. when viewing a face with the eyes hidden from view, early visual areas contain information about the hidden face region). There is also the potential to conduct layer-specific fMRI at 7T and/or MEG as part of the project through existing high-profile collaborations. The results of these studies will have significant implications both for our basic understanding of how the brain processes sensory information and also for a range of populations where Predictive Processing is thought to be impaired (e.g. Autism, Psychosis).
Person Specification
Acceptable first degree in Psychology or closely related field. Minimum entry requirement is UK 2:1; 60% in Masters in psychological research methods, or equivalent experience, required.
Funding notes
This PhD project is in a School of Psychology competition for funded studentships. These studentships are funded for 3 years and comprise of home/EU tuition fees and an annual stipend of £14,777. Overseas applicants may apply but they are required to fund the difference between home/EU and overseas tuition fees (which for 2018-19 are detailed on the University's fees pages at https://portal.uea.ac.uk/planningoffice/tuition-fees. Please note tuition fees are subject to an annual increase).
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