-
intelligence (AI). Are you excited to advance our scientific understanding of what a cognitive capacity is? Do you question the AI hype on the so-called human-like capacities of machines? Do you enjoy thinking
-
interdisciplinary and intersectoral skills who will act as a beacon of inspiration and source of intellectual support, rather than a distant star. As a professor, you should be ready for a role as standard bearer in
-
PhD Candidate: Neurocognitive Mechanisms of Alternative Thinking at the Donders Centre for Cognition
to gain insight into the role and mechanisms of alternative thinking. By embedding participants in live interactions with other human agents, this project will study alternative thinking in an experimental
-
underpinnings of the human mind. Research at the Donders Institute is focused around four themes: 1. Language and communication, 2. Perception, action and control, 3. Plasticity and memory, 4. Neural computation
-
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
-
courses in the Bachelor’s programme in Human Neuroscience and the Master’s programme in Medical Biology, the specialisation in Neurobiology, or the Physics specialisation in Neurophysics. A large part of
-
can be mediated by direct or indirect interactions between gut microbes and the immune system, but microbial metabolites are thought to be key mediators. Among the microbial metabolites found in humans
-
aspiring data science researcher with an interest in human immunology, causal inference in dynamical systems, and/or computer vision? Would you like to apply AI and machine learning for fundamental research
-
Science, Humanities, or Artificial Intelligence, with demonstrable knowledge of intersectional critical theory (e.g. training in feminist theory, queer theory, critical race studies, postcolonial theory
-
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