About the role
Research Fellow (Experimental Psychology/Neuroscience) is a active engineering role at ntu in NTU Main Campus, Singapore. Open the role to review the official description and apply on the company site.
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Key Responsibilities
- Conduct independent research
- Handle grant-related administrative tasks (e.g., prepare and amend ethics documents)
- Conduct literature reviews, and prepare research progress reports and policy reports for stakeholders
- Supervise and lead a team of full-time and part-time research staff and undergraduate student assistants working on the project.
- Play a central role in coordinating and running of neuroimaging study
- Data collection from young children
- Develop and/or manage data analysis pipelines
- Coordinate between and liaising with faculty, collaborators, and stakeholders from different disciplines
- Carry any other duties as required by PI and co-PI(s)
Requirements
- Doctoral degree (PhD) for the Research Fellow position in experimental psychology, biopsychology, cognitive psychology, educational neuroscience, NeuroAI, neuropsychology, neurology, psychiatry, cognitive neuroscience, and related fields.
- Competencies and Skills
- Possess excellent oral and written communication skills to perform literature reviews and write progress and research reports.
- Knowledge and experience in social science research methodologies.
- Good statistical knowledge and skills, including familiarity with statistical analysis tools (e.g., SPSS, R, Jamovi and JASP).
- Familiarity with neuroimaging software (e.g., SPM, AFNI, FSL).
- Familiar with coding (e.g., in R, MATLAB, Python).
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- Excellent organizational skills, project coordination and administration skills (e.g., in data management and storage), and able to work within tight deadlines.
- Good leadership skills.
- Self-directed learner who can effectively picks up relevant skills as needed.
- Self-motivated, able to work independently to collect data, analyse data, and communicate findings.
- /or neuroimaging research with children and/or adults, especially using fMRI, will be preferred.