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Postdoctoral Scholar--Embryonic activity-dependent Cortical Circuit Development and Plasticity

Society for Neuroscience
United States, South Carolina, Charleston
Apr 17, 2025
Postdoctoral Scholar--Embryonic activity-dependent Cortical Circuit Development and Plasticity
Employer


Medical University of South Carolina- Dept. of Neurosciences

Location

Charleston, South Carolina

Salary

NIH scale plus benefits

Closing date

Jun 16, 2025


View more categories View less categories


Sector

Medical, Veterinary or Dental School

Job Function

Postdoctoral Researcher

Research Area

Cognition,
Development,
Sensory Systems

Position Type

Full Time

Level

Any Experience Level Considered


  • Job Details

  • Company

Job Details

Join the Bharioke Lab (bhariokelab.com) to study the developmentof cortical circuits, and the effects of developmental changes in activity on the function of adult circuits. Study these effects on mouse models of autism and other neurodevelopmentaldisorders.

Combine cutting-edge methods of two-photon imaging and holographic stimulation in embryonic cortical circuits, in vivo, with computational modelling to better understand the role of neuronal dynamics in circuit function.

Join a vibrant (and growing) community of neural circuits labs, in the Neuroscience Department at the Medical University of South Carolina, located in the balmy climes of Charleston.

Interested students, with their PhD (or in the process of completing their PhD), are encouraged to contact Arjun Bharioke (bharioke@musc.edu) by email, directly. Funded postdoctoral positions are available.Please include your CV and contact information for at least two referees in your email.



Company
We are a basic science research enterprise whose 22 faculty and 120 employees are dedicated to discovering how the brain works. The department is devoted to understanding how the brain generates thoughts, personality and behavior, and how brain pathologies create neurological and psychiatric diseases. To this end, we employ a host of cutting-edge electrophysiological, endoscopic, biochemical, genetic and behavioral approaches. We use the latest technologies for molecular and brain circuit imaging, cell- and circuit-selective optical and chemogenetic brain stimulation, and innovative molecular-genetic tools to study brain function across all stages of life.
In our laboratories, exploration of brain mechanisms ranges from discovering how protein ensembles are regulated to identifying how brain circuits regulate human cognition and thought processing. We employ cellular and animal models of disease and have a strong human imaging research team that translates our basic discoveries of how brain circuits regulate behavior into humans. Our research efforts resulted in $14 million in NIH awards in fiscal year 2017, making us the 8th-ranked Neuroscience department in the nation in terms of funding, and the 2nd-ranked department in the College of Medicine at MUSC. In particular, the department has strong research programs in addiction neurobiology, neurodegeneration, neurodevelopment, and in vivo brain imaging, recording and stimulation technologies.
This level of research activity helps maintain a vibrant educational program. We have robust Ph.D. and M.D./Ph.D. training programs in Neuroscience and a strong postdoctoral training program, constituting 30 graduate students and 40 postdoctoral fellows. Our trainees are funded through a combination of stipends from the College of Graduate Studies, individual NIH and other awards, and NIH institutional T32 training grants. Graduate training includes a core neuroscience curriculum and electives on a wide range of topics in neuroscience. In addition, we have a robust departmental seminar series with invited speakers from leading institutions across the nation.
Finally, our department is located in beautiful Charleston, South Carolina - a historic town dominated by the education industry with four colleges, including MUSC, creating a strong intellectual tradition and creative environment. Charleston is often ranked as the #1 city to visit in the USA, and is widely known as an art and food community with numerous festivals appealing to both residents and tourists.
Learn more at: https://medicine.musc.edu/departments/neuroscience
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