Postdoctoral Fellowships in Model-based Cognitive Neuroscience at Vanderbilt
Department of Psychology
Vanderbilt Vision Research Center
We eagerly seek postdoctoral fellows to join research projects in model-based cognitive
neuroscience, developing and testing computational models of visual cognition that connect
behavior and brain data.
Fellows will join an ongoing collaboration of Thomas Palmeri, Jeffrey Schall, and Gordon
Logan at Vanderbilt using cognitive and neural models to understand perceptual decision
making, cognitive control, and visual attention. Successful models predict details of
observed behavior and are constrained by or predict neurophysiological,
electrophysiological, and brain imaging data in human and non-human primates. Fellows also
have opportunities to join a collaboration of Thomas Palmeri, Isabel Gauthier, and their
colleagues using combinations of cognitive, psychometric, and deep learning models to
understand object recognition, categorization, visual learning, and perceptual expertise
and to explain individual differences in behavior and brain data.
Research facilities include high-end laboratory workstations, behavioral testing stations,
a web-based server infrastructure for online experiments, eye trackers, a shared 7000+
core CPU cluster and large-scale GPU cluster at Vanderbilt’s ACCRE, and state-of-the art
facilities for neurophysiology, electrophysiology, and brain imaging. Postdoctoral fellows
will also take advantage of the facilities and support provided by the Department of
Psychology
(
www.vanderbilt.edu/psychological_sciences/<http://www.vanderbilt.edu/psy…)
and the Vanderbilt Vision Research Center
(vvrc.vanderbilt.edu<http://vvrc.vanderbilt.edu>). And as Dave Grohl of the Foo
Fighters said, “Everybody now thinks that Nashville is ... the coolest city in America”.
Candidates can hold a Ph.D. in psychology, neuroscience, computer science, mathematics,
engineering, or related disciplines. Candidates should have demonstrated skills in
computer programming and statistical analyses. Some background and/or strong interest in
computational modeling is desired. For those with significant modeling expertise, a
knowledge of basic neuroscience is desired but not required. Start date is negotiable, but
preference will be given to candidates who can begin soon. Applications will be reviewed
on a rolling basis as they arrive. Salary will be based on the NIH postdoctoral scale.
Please forward to potential applicants.
Applicants should send a cover letter with a brief research statement, a CV, and names and
email addresses of three references to:
Thomas Palmeri
Department of Psychology
Vanderbilt Vision Research Center
Vanderbilt University
Nashville, TN 37240
thomas.j.palmeri@vanderbilt.edu<mailto:thomas.j.palmeri@vanderbilt.edu>
catlab.psy.vanderbilt.edu<http://catlab.psy.vanderbilt.edu>
*apologies for cross-posting*
---------------------------
Thomas Palmeri
Professor of Psychology
co-Director of Scientific Computing
Department of Psychology
507 Wilson Hall
Vanderbilt University
111 21st Avenue South
Nashville, Tennessee 37240
thomas.j.palmeri@vanderbilt.edu<mailto:thomas.j.palmeri@vanderbilt.edu>
http://catlab.psy.vanderbilt.edu