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At Radboud University, we aim to make an impact through our work. We achieve this by conducting groundbreaking research, providing high-quality education, offering excellent support, and fostering collaborations within and outside the university. In doing so, we contribute indispensably to a healthy, free world with equal opportunities for all. To accomplish this, we need even more colleagues who, based on their expertise, are willing to search for answers. We advocate for an inclusive community and welcome employees with diverse backgrounds, cultures, and perspectives. Will you also contribute to making the world a little better? You have a part to play.
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Faculty of Social Sciences
At the Faculty of Social Sciences, humanity and society are our focus; we study how people behave, think and feel. Within this context, we look at themes such as human behaviour and the human psyche, education and upbringing, communication, society and culture. The faculty provides education to 6,000 students and employs 700 staff. Education is organised into six programme clusters: Psychology; Artificial Intelligence; Pedagogical Sciences and Educational Sciences; Communication Science; Sociology; and Cultural Anthropology and Developmental Sociology, and the Radboud Centre Social Sciences as an institute for post-master education have been merged into the Social Sciences Education Institute. Our research is carried out within three research institutes: the Donders Centre for Cognition, the Behavioural Science Institute, and Radboud Social Cultural Research.
How do people make decisions regarding the social environment? How do they learn the implicit rules of a social group? Are moral decisions different from other decisions? Can people shift their moral boundaries easily? How are these decisions computed in our brains? If you are interested in solid, quantitative answers to these questions, we might be looking for you!
The Donders Centre for Cognition is seeking a talented postdoctoral researcher to lead a new research line into moral decision making. The project aims to develop a Bayesian model of moral decision making to test various hypotheses about the interactions between moral and other factors in social decision making. The model will be tested in a series of behavioural and neuroimaging experiments and will feed into a PhD project that you will co-supervise.
The project is funded by the NWO grant entitled ‘Morality as a hyperparameter in decision making: A new approach to studying an age-old problem’. The project will benefit from ongoing collaborations with the University of Oxford (Rogier Mars), the University of Cambridge (Francesco Poli), the Dutch Institute for Forensic Psychiatry and Psychology (Maaike Kempes), and the University of Copenhagen (James Blair).
You will be working in a multidisciplinary research group to develop a novel experimental paradigm and computational model to study the behavioural and neural basis of moral decision making. You will be responsible for developing and piloting the experimental task, acquiring and analysing data, and reporting the data at conferences and in peer-reviewed publications. You will interact with other researchers and collect data from healthy adult volunteers. You will develop a computational model of moral decision making, based on existing models in the lab. You will work in conjunction with other researchers in the lab and through international collaboration.
You will be part of the Systems Approach to Maladaptive Behaviour and Antisociality (SAMBA) group headed by Inti Brazil and the Cognitive Neuroecology Lab headed by Rogier Mars.
The Donders Institute for Brain, Cognition and Behaviour is a world-class interfaculty research centre that houses more than 700 researchers devoted to understanding the mechanistic underpinnings of the human mind. Research at the Donders Institute is focused around four themes: 1. Language and communication, 2. Perception, action and decision-making, 3. Development and lifelong plasticity, 4. Natural computing and neurotechnology. Excellent, state-of-the-art research facilities are available for the broad range of neuroscience research that is being conducted at the Donders Institute. The Donders Institute has been assessed by an international evaluation committee as ‘excellent’ and recognised as a ‘very stimulating environment for top researchers, as well as for young talent’. The Donders Institute fosters a collaborative, multidisciplinary and supportive research environment with a diverse international staff. English is the lingua franca at the Institute.
You can apply only via the button below. Address your letter of application to Rogier Mars. In the application form, you will find which documents you need to include with your application.
The first interviews will take place around 15 November. You will preferably start your employment on 1 February 2025.
We can imagine you're curious about our application procedure. It describes what you can expect during the application procedure and how we handle your personal data and internal and external candidates. If you wish to apply for a non-scientific position with a non-EU nationality, please take notice of the following information.
Type of employment | Temporary position |
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Contract type | Full time |
First day of employment | 01-02-2025 |
Salary | Onderzoeker 3 |
Salary |
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Number of positions | 1 |
Full-time equivalent | 1,0 fte |
City | Nijmegen |
County | Gelderland |
Country | Netherlands |
Reference number | 24.066.24 |
Contact |
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Published | 16.Oct.2024 |
Last application date | 07.Nov.2024 11:59 PM CET |