Fully Funded PhD Scholarship in Psychology at the University of Sheffield
University of Sheffield – Department of Psychology
Qualification type: | PhD |
Location: | Sheffield |
Funding for: | UK Students, EU Students |
Funding amount: | Not specified |
Hours: | Full Time |
This is one of many projects in competition for the current funding opportunities available within the Department of Psychology
Project title: Self-organisation as a theory of brain development
Primary supervisor: Dr Stuart Wilson
Co-supervisor: Dr JV Stone
Project description: Self-organisation is a general theory of how function is assigned to cortical microcircuits. The theory predicts that a balance between cooperative and competitive interactions in local cortical circuits, consolidated by Hebbian learning, results in similar inputs being represented by nearby neurons. Simulations of cortical self-organisation have mainly concerned vision, where ‘similar inputs’ may translate to ‘pixels at similar retinal locations’ or ‘edges of similar orientation’. My previous work has extended the approach for touch, showing that ‘similar inputs’ can, for example, translate to ‘body parts often touching’. In principle, self-organising models can generate predictions about the functional organisation assigned to any cortical area. In practice, the validity of these models is limited by the accuracy with which model inputs reflect natural developmental experiences. Particularly for ‘higher-order’ cortical areas that combine information from multiple sources, i.e., multisensory or sensorimotor areas, natural interactions between these sources are difficult to synthesize. The project aims to address this bottleneck, by exploiting natural human and animal behaviours to generate inputs for models of map formation. This should help improve our understanding of the developmental mechanisms that underlie disorders of multisensory and sensorimotor integration.
Start date: 1 October 2016
Requirements: Applicants must have, or expect to obtain, a minimum of a first class or high upper second-class honours degree in psychology or a related discipline. In general awards are usually made to applicants with first class undergraduate degrees and/or at least a merit at masters level.
For further details and the application process please visit: www.sheffield.ac.uk/psychology/prospectivepg/funding
Closing date for applications is 5pm Tuesday, 2 February 2016
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