lundi 25 septembre 2017

PhD position

Host laboratory: Institut des Sciences Cognitives, 67 Bd Pinel, Bron, 69675 Bron, France
Host team: Bases neurales de la cognition spatiale et de l’action
Supervisor: Suliann Ben Hamed (04 37 91 12 40, benhamed@isc.cnrs.fr)
Position: PhD position
Title: Behavioral and pharmacological enhancement of neural plasticity in the adult visual cortex
Summary
Though adult neuronal plasticity has been considered as extremely restricted as compared to that observed during early brain development, growing evidence indicates that it can be drastically enhanced by specific manipulations. Our aim is to compare the cortical effects of visual plasticity in the adult brain in the non-human primate model, when this plasticity is induced by sensory influences, cognitive influences or/and local pharmacological influences. We will characterize the short and long term effects of plasticity on the cortical visual system (visual cortex V1 and higher parietal and prefrontal visual areas LIP and FEF), as assessed by a combination of high spatial resolution (3T fMRI) and high temporal resolution (EEG) methods.
Though the present project is a fundamental research project, aiming at providing a long-missing integrative view of plasticity in the adult visual cortex, we believe that its outcome will provide new directions of investigation to manage abnormal visual experience due to eye misalignment in early childhood (amblyopia, congenital cataract) or visual deficits following acute cortical lesions (following head traumas or cerebral vascular accident) leading to such conditions as anopsia or neglect, thus addressing major issues in the physiopathology of the visual cortex.
You will specifically be responsible for the daily training of one of the monkeys involved in the study as well as for the analysis of the collected behavioral data. In addition, you will participate in the functional imaging recordings and in the subsequent analysis of these data.
Training hallmarks: Hands on familiarization and training on non‐human primate behavioral conditioning, functional magnetic resonance imaging data collection and analysis, analysis of physiological (pupillary dilatation) and behavioral (eye movements, reaction times and performance) data. All this, in tight interaction with the different members of the team.