Finally job adverts for ERC project start May
https://sites.google.com/view/ecc-team/positions/postdoc . ~2 PostDocs with Neuroimaging, modelling or neurostimulation exp. Positions for ~3 to 4 years, BUT possibility for productive Postdoc to apply for Inserm/CNRS permanent, tenured, research-only PI positions. This is a particularly attractive feature of french system. CRCN at Inserm (
https://eva3-accueil.inserm.fr/sites/eva/english-site/Pages/default.aspx ) or CNRS (
https://cnrs.fr/en/competitive-entrance-examinations-researchers-womenmen )

ECC Team - Postdoc
There are multiple ways to join the lab as a postdoc. See below for some concrete opportunities or just contact us directly to find out more!
We have finally made a team website showcasing some of our current work, members, publications and advertising open positions. Have a look if you are interested in our work!
https://sites.google.com/view/ecc-team/home
ECC Team
Team info
The primary aim of our team is understanding of how the human brain implements reward-guided decision making, learning and plans into the future. For this, we focus particularly on the role of the frontal lobes in generating choices and making predictions based on rewards and other
I got a Team page now:
https://sbri.fr/teams/ecological-cognition-and-computation-ecc-emergent-team/Good opportunity to remind everyone that we are hiring! I am particularly looking for a research manager and Postdocs, so if you are in the process of finishing your degree (PhD or MSc) and are interested in our work, get in touch!
Ecological Cognition and Computation / Emergent Team โ SBRI
Happy to see paper out! Exciting collab project with Caroline Jahn, Jan Grohn and Jerome Sallet (and many others!) on the neural substrates of strategic exploration and counterfactual learning in primate PFC!
https://journals.plos.org/plosbiology/article?id=10.1371/journal.pbio.3001985super impressive how they got the animals to learn this task!

Neural responses in macaque prefrontal cortex are linked to strategic exploration
Humans have been shown to strategically explore; non-human primates are also thought to strategically explore, but do they use the same strategies and neural bases? This study reveals that monkeys strategically explore to improve future outcomes; such strategic exploration is linked to distinct signals in their frontal cortex.