Master of Science in Cognitive Neuroscience and Neuroimaging (C892)
This web page is under construction and may undergo changes during the Academic Year 2011/2012. MSc students please visit this page frequently so that you become aware of updates.
Most of the modules are for students on the MSc in Cognitive Neuroscience and Neuroimaging (C892). Some of the modules are for students on the MSc in Translational Neuroimaging (C863).
The course structure for C892 is outlined in a handbook (version 02 Sep 2011) which also contains basic information about assessment. For more details please see the module catalogue (search by module code) and tutorial information (version 03 June 2011).
Induction meeting (C892) - time and venue to be annouced
Topics: Structure of the course, assessment, computer ressources ... Before the meeting, please try whether your university login and password are working on the Psychology classroom computers (you can use any computer in A5, A6, A20, A21).
Induction meeting (placements and projects) - time and venue to be announced
For slides from this meeting see here
Table of Contents
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Methods for Cognitive Neuroscience: Methods based on Magnetic Resonance Imaging (C892, C863 students)
C84BIM (see UoN module catalogue),
15 credits, Semester one = autumn, see map, sample exam and exam marking scheme
Wedn 05 Oct 2011 14:00 - 16:00, venue: A17, Psychology Building |
Basic MR physics and BOLD physics I Dr Alain Pitiot, School of Psychology |
see WebCTor Handout (link)
|
Wedn 12 Oct 2011 14:00 - 16:00, venue: A17, Psychology Building |
Basic MR physics and BOLD physics II Dr Alain Pitiot, School of Psychology |
see WebCT |
Wedn 19 Oct 2011 14:00 - 16:00, venue: A17, Psychology Building |
Basic MR physics and BOLD physics III Dr Alain Pitiot, School of Psychology |
see WebCT |
Wedn 26 Oct 2011 14:00 - 16:00, venue: A17, Psychology Building |
BOLD physiology Prof Dorothee Auer, Academic Radiology |
see WebCT |
Wedn 02 Nov 2011 14:00 - 16:00, venue: A17, Psychology Building |
Functional MRI I: Spatial and temporal properties of fMRI Dr Denis Schluppeck, School of Psychology |
see WebCT for lecture handout and problem-based learning (PBL) handout see also list of web resources |
Wedn 09 Nov 2011 14:00 - 16:00, venue: A17, Psychology Building |
Functional MRI II: Signal and noise Dr Denis Schluppeck, School of Psychology |
see WebCT > |
Wedn 16 Nov 2011 14:00 - 16:00, venue: A17, Psychology Building |
Functional MRI III: Preprocessing of fMRI data Dr Denis Schluppeck, School of Psychology |
see WebCT |
Wedn 23 Nov 2011 14:00 - 16:00, venue: A17, Psychology Building |
Functional MRI IV: Statistics and experimental design Dr Denis Schluppeck, School of Psychology |
see WebCT |
Wedn 30 Nov 2011 14:00 - 16:00, venue: A17, Psychology Building |
No C84BIM lecture in this time slot, see Fri 16 Dec instead (below)
|
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Wedn 07 Dec 2011 14:00 - 16:00, venue: A17, Psychology Building |
Advanced MR morphometry: Methods and Applications Dr Alain Pitiot, School of Psychology |
see WebCT or Handout (link) |
Wedn 14 Dec 2011 14:00 - 16:00, venue: A17, Psychology Building |
Diffusion tensor imaging Prof Dorothee Auer, Academic Radiology |
see WebCT |
Fri 16 Dec 2011 14:00 - 16:00, venue: B37, Psychology Building |
Basic MR morphometry (manual) Dr Mirjam Schubert, University of Munich |
see WebCT |
*Handouts to be accessed via this link once available
Recommended reading
- A book that is rather unique in its combination of depth and accessibility: Huettel SA, Song AW, McCarthy G. Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging. Sunderland: Sinauer, 2nd edition 2009, ISBN-13 978-087893-286-3
Handbook chapter and in-depth reading
Many fMRI resources can be found on the web but please be aware that the quality of this material may vary; some examples are listed here
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Methods for Cognitive Neuroscience: Electrophysiological and behavioural methods (C892 students)
C84EBM (see UoN module catalogue),
15 credits, Semester one = autumn, see map, sample exam and exam marking scheme
Fri 07 Oct 2011 11:00 - 13:00, Venue: A1, Psychology Building |
Magnetoencephalography (MEG) I Dr Martin Schürmann, School of Psychology |
see WebCT |
Fri 14 Oct 2011 11:00 - 13:00, Venue: A1, Psychology Building |
Magnetoencephalography (MEG) II Dr Martin Schürmann, School of Psychology |
see WebCT |
Fri 21 Oct 2011 11:00 - 13:00, Venue: A1, Psychology Building |
Event-related potentials (ERPs) Dr Martin Schürmann, School of Psychology |
see WebCT |
Fri 28 Oct 2011 11:00 - 13:00, Venue: A1, Psychology Building |
Electroencephalography (EEG), focus on frequency analysis Dr Deborah Serrien, School of Psychology |
see WebCT |
Fri 04 Nov 2011 11:00 - 13:00, Venue: A1, Psychology Building |
EEG analysis on single-trial basis Dr Marios Philiastides, School of Psychology |
see WebCT |
Fri 11 Nov 2011 11:00 - 13:00, Venue: A1, Psychology Building |
Movement kinematics Dr Roger Newport, School of Psychology |
see WebCT |
Fri 18 Nov 2011 11:00 - 13:00, Venue: A1, Psychology Building |
Experimental neuropsychology Dr Roger Newport, School of Psychology |
see WebCT |
Fri 25 Nov 2011 11:00 - 13:00, Venue: A1, Psychology Building |
Clinical neuropsychology: common causes and patterns of acquired brain damage Dr Alan Sunderland, School of Psychology |
see WebCT |
Fri 02 Dec 2011 11:00 - 13:00, Venue: A1, Psychology Building |
Psychophysics for vision and audition Prof Paul McGraw, School of Psychology |
|
Fri 09 Dec 2011 11:00 - 13:00, Venue: A1, Psychology Building |
E-prime practical I Dr Jonathan Stirk, School of Psychology |
see WebCT |
Fri 16 Dec 2011 11:00 - 13:00, Venue: A1, Psychology Building |
E-prime practical II Dr Jonathan Stirk, School of Psychology |
see WebCT |
*Handouts to be accessed via this link once available
Handbook chapters and reviews - see also handouts for individual lectures
- MEG: Hari R, Parkkonen L, Nangini C. The brain in time: insights from neuromagnetic recordings. Ann N Y Acad Sci 2010, 1191: 89
- MEG: Hari R, Levänen S, Raij T. Timing of human cortical functions during cognition: role of MEG. Trends Cogn Sci 2000, 4: 455
- EEG/MEG vs fMRI: Shibasaki H. Human brain mapping: hemodynamic response and electrophysiology. Clin Neurophysiol. 2008; 119: 731
- EEG biophysics and data analysis, Olaf Hauk, Univ Cambridge (for in depth-reading only)
- Detailed review article (in-depth reading only) on biophysics of EEG and localization of neural sources from EEG and MEG - Lopes da Silva FH. Magn Res Imag 2004; 22: 1533–1538
- Comprehensive handbook chapter about ERPs - Fabiani M et al. Event-related brain potentials. In: Cacioppo JT, Tassinary LG, Berntson GG. Handbook of Psychophysiology. Cambridge Univ Press, 3rd edition, 2007
- Review article about ERPs - Muller-Gass A, Campbell K. Int J Psychopharamcol 2002; 46: 177-195)
- Detailed handbook on ERP methods - Handy TC. Event-related potentials. A methods handbook. MIT Press 2004
- Detailed handbook on ERP methods - Luck SJ. An Introduction to the Event-Related Potential Technique. MIT Press 2005
- Review article (for in-depth reading) about EEG frequency analysis - Engel AK, Fries P, Singer W (2001). Dynamic predictions: Oscillations and synchrony in top-down processing. Nature Reviews Neuroscience, 2, 704-716
- Review article (for in-depth reading) about EEG frequency analysis - Fries P (2005). A mechanism for cognitive dynamics: neuronal communication through neuronal coherence. Trends in Cognitive Sciences, 9, 474-480
- Review article (for in-depth reading) about EEG frequency analysis - Pfurtscheller G, Lopes da Silva FH (1999). Event-related EEG/MEG synchronization and desynchronization: basic principles. Clinical Neurophysiology, 110, 1842-1857
- Review article (for in-depth reading) about EEG frequency analysis - Sauseng P, Klimesch W (2008). What does phase information of oscillatory brain activity tell us about cognitive processes? Neuroscience and Biobehavioral Reviews, 32, 1001-1013
- Review article (for in-depth reading) about EEG frequency analysis - Varela F, Lachaux J-P, Rodriguez E, Martinerie J (2001).The brainweb: Phase synchronization and large-scale integration. Nature Reviews Neuroscience, 2, 229-239
- Comprehensive handbook chapter about brain lesions and functional localization - Koenigs M et al. The lesion method in cognitive neuroscience. In: Cacioppo JT, Tassinary LG, Berntson GG. Handbook of Psychophysiology. Cambridge Univ Press, 3rd edition, 2007
- Neuropsychology based on brain lesions vs functional imaging: Rorden C, Karnath HO. Nature Reviews Neuroscience 2004; 5, 813-819.
- MEG community website
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Cognitive Neuroscience: Basic introduction and implications for experimental design in fMRI, MEG, EEG, and TMS studies (C892 students)
C84LCN (see UoN module catalogue),
15 credits, Semester one = autumn, see map
Fri 07 Oct 2011 14:00 - 16:00, Venue: B37, Psychology Building |
Review of cognitive neuroscience: Basic neuroanatomy Dr Martin Schürmann, School of Psychology Review of cognitive neuroscience: Digital neuroanatomy resources for students Dr Alain Pitiot, School of Psychology |
see WebCT List of resources (link, version 20 Oct 2009) |
Fri 14 Oct 2011 14:00 - 16:00, Venue: B37, Psychology Building |
Review of cognitive neuroscience: vision Dr Jon Peirce, School of Psychology |
see WebCT |
Fri 21 Oct 2011 14:00 - 16:00, Venue: B37, Psychology Building |
Review of cognitive neuroscience: hearing Dr Daniel Shub, MRC Institute of Hearing Research Review of cognitive neuroscience: language Dr Walter van Heuven, School of Psychology |
see WebCT Handout (link) |
Fri 28 Oct 2011 14:00 - 16:00, Venue: B37, Psychology Building |
Review of cognitive neuroscience: memory Dr Paula Moran, School of Psychology Language studies: Experimental design Dr Walter van Heuven, School of Psychology |
see WebCT Handout (link) |
Fri 04 Nov 2011 14:00 - 16:00, Venue: B37, Psychology Building |
Review of cognitive neuroscience: decison making Dr Marios Philiastides, School of Psychology Cognitive neuroscience of psychiatric disorders Prof Peter Liddle, Community Health Sciences |
see WebCT see WebCT |
Fri 11 Nov 2011 14:00 - 16:00, Venue: B37, Psychology Building |
Social cognitive neuroscience Dr Antonia Hamilton, School of Psychology
|
see WebCT |
Fri 18 Nov 2011 14:00 - 16:00, Venue: B37, Psychology Building |
Vision: cognitive neuroscience and experimental design Dr Jon Peirce, School of Psychology |
see WebCT |
Fri 25 Nov 2011 14:00 - 16:00, Venue: B37, Psychology Building |
Recovery after brain damage and response to rehabilitation therapy: experimental design Dr Alan Sunderland, School of Psychology Audition: cognitive neuroscience and experimental design (MEG) Dr Peyman Adjamian, MRC Institute of Hearing Research |
see WebCT see WebCT |
Fri 02 Dec 2011 14:00 - 16:00, Venue: B37, Psychology Building |
Decision making: cognitive neuroscience and experimental design Dr Marios Philiastides, School of Psychology
|
see WebCT |
Fri 09 Dec 2011 14:00 - 16:00, Venue: B37, Psychology Building |
Experimental design for studying brain correlates of psychiatric disorders Dr Elizabeth Liddle, Community Health Sciences |
see WebCT |
Fri 16 Dec 2011 14:00 - 16:00 |
C84BIM lecture in this time slot tba |
|
*Handouts to be accessed via this link once available
Recommended reading: all of the following books are written to be accessible to students; the first two are textbooks, the third is less detailed than a textbook but it is remarkably well structured and engaging
- Purves D et al. (eds). Principles of Cognitive Neuroscience. Sunderland: Sinauer 2008, ISBN 978-0-87893-694-6
- Gazzaniga MS, Ivry RB, Mangun GR (eds). Cognitive Neuroscience: The Biology of the Mind. New York: Norton 2nd edition 2002, ISBN 0393977773
- Ward J. The Student's Guide to Cognitive Neuroscience. Hove: Psychology Press 2006, ISBN 1-84169-535-1
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Neuroimaging practicals with Matlab course (C892 students) and Computer programming for stimuli and analysis with demonstration of fMRI/MEG data analysis packages (C863 students)
C84NIM (C892) (see UoN module catalogue, update in progress), 20 credits, year-long module
and C84CPR (C863)
(see UoN module catalogue, update in progress), 15 credits, year-long module
See here for lectures/practicals shared between both modules, C84NIM and C84CPR. See below for explanation of obligatory and optional lectures, separate by module.
Lectures/practicals include demonstrations that require students to log in to classroom computers (in room A5), both in Windows XP and in MacOS. Before the course begins, please test whether your login works on the classroom computers.
SECTION (a) |
Date to be confirmed |
Tour of MR centre |
see WebCT |
SECTION (a) |
Date to be confirmed |
Tour of EEG lab |
see WebCT |
SECTION (b) |
Tue 08 Nov 2011, 14:00-16:00, computer classroom A5, Psychology | fMRI in problem-based learning Dr Denis Schluppeck, School of Psychology |
see WebCT for handouts on Problem-based learning (PBL), Notes for practical (with details on assignment) and Notes on hands-on data tutorial |
SECTION (c) |
Tue 15 Nov 2011, 14:00-16:00, computer classroom A5, Psychology |
SPM for fMRI analysis I Dr Antonia Hamilton, School of Psychology |
see WebCT |
SECTION (c) |
Tue 22 Nov 2011, 14:00-16:00, computer classroom A5, Psychology |
SPM for fMRI analysis II Dr Antonia Hamilton, School of Psychology |
Handout* |
SECTION (c) |
Tue 29 Nov 2011, 14:00-16:00, computer classroom A5, Psychology |
SPM for fMRI analysis III Dr Antonia Hamilton, School of Psychology |
Handout* |
SECTION (d) |
Tue 06 Dec 2011, 14:00-16:00, computer classroom A5, Psychology |
Software packages for fMRI (other than SPM) Dr Denis Schluppeck, School of Psychology Morphometry and co-registration software Dr Alain Pitiot, School of Psychology
|
see WebCT |
SECTION (i) |
Tue 13 Dec 2011, 14:00-16:00, computer classroom A5, Psychology |
Pharmacological MRI and manganese-enhanced MRI Dr Tobias Bast, School of Psychology |
see WebCT |
SECTION (e) |
Tue 31 Jan 2011, 14:00-16:00, computer classroom A5, Psychology |
Matlab course I Dr Antonia Hamilton, School of Psychology |
Handout* |
SECTION (e) |
Tue 07 Feb 2011, 14:00-16:00, computer classroom A5, Psychology |
Matlab course II Dr Antonia Hamilton, School of Psychology |
Handout* |
SECTION (e) |
Tue 14 Feb 2011, 14:00-16:00, computer classroom A5, Psychology |
Matlab course III Dr Antonia Hamilton, School of Psychology |
Handout* |
SECTION (e) |
Tue 21 Feb 2011, 14:00-16:00, computer classroom A5, Psychology |
Matlab course IV Dr Antonia Hamilton, School of Psychology |
Handout* |
SECTION (e) |
Tue 28 Feb 2011, 14:00-16:00, computer classroom A5, Psychology |
Matlab course V Dr Antonia Hamilton, School of Psychology |
Handout* |
SECTION (f) |
Tue 06 Mar 2011, 14:00-16:00, lecture hall B37, Psychology |
Review of cognitive neuroscience: motor functions and touch Prof Steve Jackson, School of Psychology
|
see WebCT |
SECTION (f) |
Tue 13 Mar 2011, 14:00-16:00, lecture hall B37, Psychology |
Sensorimotor function and cognitive control: cognitive neuroscience and experimental design Prof Steve Jackson, School of Psychology
|
see WebCT |
SECTION (g) |
Tue 20 Mar 2011, 14:00-16:00, lecture hall B37, Psychology |
Transcranial Magnetic stimulation (TMS) I Prof Steve Jackson, School of Psychology
|
see WebCT |
SECTION (g) |
Tue 27 Mar 2011, 14:00-16:00, lecture hall B21, Physics |
Transcranial Magnetic stimulation (TMS) II Prof Steve Jackson, School of Psychology
|
see WebCT |
SECTION (h) |
Tue 01 May 2011, 14:00-16:00, lecture hall B37, Psychology |
fMRI meta-analysis Prof Steve Jackson, School of Psychology
|
see WebCT |
See below for explanation of obligatory and optional lectures, separate by module C84NIM for C892 students, C84CPR for C863 students. Section codes refer to table above. ## C84CPR will likely be suspended in 2011/12. Students on the MSc Cogn Neurosci (C892) are not affected by this change and take ALL C84NIM lectures as listed above.##
SECTION |
for C892 (20 credits) |
for C863 (15 credits) |
(a) |
optional element of C84NIM |
optional element of C84CPR |
(b) |
obligatory element of C84NIM, assessed (5 credits) |
obligatory element of C84CPR |
(c) |
obligatory element of C84NIM, assessed in combination with section (e), 15 credits |
obligatory element of C84CPR, assessed in combination with section (e), 15 credits |
(d) |
obligatory element of C84NIM |
obligatory element of C84CPR |
(e) |
obligatory element of C84NIM, assessed in combination with section (c), 15 credits |
obligatory element of C84CPR, assessed in combination with section (c), 15 credits |
(f) |
obligatory element of C84NIM |
optional element of C84CPR |
(g) |
obligatory element of C84NIM |
optional element of C84CPR |
(h) |
obligatory element of C84NIM |
obligatory element of C84CPR |
(i) |
obligatory element of C84NIM |
obligatory element of C84CPR |
E-prime lectures Dec 2010 |
obligatory element of C84EBM |
obligatory element of C84CPR |
Handbook chapters and reviews - see also handouts for individual lectures
----------------Statistics course (Methods and Data Institute) - (C892, C863 students)
C84ANM (see UoN module catalogue),
10 credits, semester two = spring, dates to be confirmed
Lectures/practicals include demonstrations that require students to log in to classroom computers (for example room A5) in Windows XP mode. Before the course begins, please test whether your login works on the classroom computers.
Recommended textbook for all students: FOX, John: Applied Regression Analysis, and Generalized Linear Models. SAGE Publications 2008 (2nd edition), ISBN 978-0761930426 (the 1st edition would do as well) - several copies are available in George Green Library
Optional complementary textbook for students who want to improve their SPSS skills: FIELD, Andy: Discovering Statistics using SPSS SAGE Publications 2009 (3rd edition) ISBN 978-1-84787-906-6 - available in George Green Library. Please note: this textbook is a very basic, step-by-step introduction to SPSS. There are numerous other SPSS-based statitics textbooks which will be equally well suited as optional complementary textbooks for C84ANM
Date to be confirmed |
Statistics for neuroimaging: some examples from recent research literature Dr Martin Schürmann, School of Psychology |
see WebCT |
Date to be confirmed |
Introduction: rehearsal of principles of statistical inference; experimental design; randomisation Prof Cees van der Eijk, Methods and Data Institute |
For handouts, messages, coursework assignments etc please visit WebCT |
Date to be confirmed |
Regression – multivariate linear; interactions; diagnostics; practical issues Prof Cees van der Eijk, Methods and Data Institute |
Handout* |
Date to be confirmed |
Mixed models, random effects, extensions of regression functional form, relationship to ANOVA Prof Cees van der Eijk, Methods and Data Institute |
Handout* |
Date to be confirmed |
Generalized Linear Modelling Prof Cees van der Eijk, Methods and Data Institute |
Handout* |
Date to be confirmed |
Bootstrapping, non-parametric approaches Prof Cees van der Eijk, Methods and Data Institute |
Handout* |
Seminars in School of Psychology and Sir Peter Mansfield MR centre (C892 students)
C84SEM (see UoN module catalogue),
10 credits, all year, external speakers' talks selected from programme I and programme II
Ethical issues in Cognitive Neuroscience, Personal Development and Research Skills (Graduate School courses)
C84ERP (see UoN module catalogue, update in progress),
15 credits, all year, selected from programme. A package of courses will be recommended to MSc students. Please see here for assessment of this module.
Please register for the graduate school courses early (in the first two weeks of the semester). Depending on the level of your knowledge in topics covered by the autumn semester lectures (C84BIM, C84EBM, C84LCN), it may be advisable to limit the number of graduate school courses in the autumn semester.
Research Placement (C892 students)
C84RPL (see UoN module catalogue),
20 credits, semester two = spring
Research Project (with details about supervisory meetings) - (C892 students)
C84PRO (see UoN module catalogue),
60 credits, over summer break
For possible topics of placements and projects, please see project catalogue (version 27 Oct 2010, please check for updates)
For slides from 29 Oct 2010 placement and project induction meeting, see here (version 29 Oct 2010)
For MSc students' allowance, typically used for payment of inconvenience allowances to subjects in placment/project work, see see here for important information.
Supervisors can find details about placement and project requirements here
Two formal meetings between MSc student and project supervisors are required during research project work. Normally the first meeting is held at the beginning of the project period and the second meeting when the student is half-way through the project. For each of these meetings a Supervision Record must be completed. No other formal meetings are required during the MSc year. (Students on a 1+3 MSc/PhD programme please note that different regulations apply to PhD years.) Students are free to ask the supervisor for additional meetings if needed. It is advisable for students to keep their own records of such extra meetings.
File formats and file names for coursework submission
- Where electronic submission of coursework is required, pdf format is normally preferable (unless stated otherwise).
- If you prefer to submit in a Microsoft-Word-readable format please choose rtf or doc but not docx (because it is not straightforward to open docx files with pre-2007 Word versions). Similarly, please use xls, not xlsx, and ppt, not pptx, when submitting files.
- Please make sure that the filename contains the module code and your name, e.g. C84RPS_Portfolio_FirstnameLastname.pdf
- Your name needs to appear on the first page of reports etc (and/or put your name in header/footer on each page), and pages are to be numbered
- Suggested word processor settings: 11 point font, line spacing 1.5 lines and left/right margins of ~2.5 cm (unless stated otherwise by module convenor)
- Please exclude references from the word count
Further advice regarding electronic submission of coursework, project reports, ...
- Whenever electronic submission of coursework is required, please send to LP-MSc-CognitiveNeuroscience (using Outlook from UoN workstations or webmail, https://email.nottingham.ac.uk). If neither UoN outlook nor UoN webmail is available, use LP-MSc-CognitiveNeuroscience@exmail.nottingham.ac.uk
- Whenever you submit coursework and/or project reports by email please keep backup copies, best in several locations: (1) in the "sent mail" directory of your email account on the @nottingham.ac.uk systems; (2) in your home directory on a Psychology server, (3) on portable memory (e.g. USB memory), (4) in a secondary email account which you can access remotely in case you are traveling (just cc your email with assignment attached to the secondary email account at the moment of submission; note that this approach also overcomes any limitations of storage space that may apply to option 1)
- Check the email inbox for error messages like "recipient cannot be reached". If you use an email client program that filters spam (junk mail), please check the settings. Don't allow automatic deletion because occasionally error messages may be sorted into the junk mail folder - such messages are obviously important!
- Before you attach a file to an email, please check the file size. Many email systems do not allow you to send files larger than - for example - 2 MB; even if you are allowed to send them, large files may block a recipient's inbox. Please get familiar with methods to reduce file size (e.g. reducing the size of graphics embedded in Microsoft Word files)
Applying for further studies (e.g. PhD programmes)
If you are interested in further studies after the MSc course, for example a PhD programme, it is important that you apply for such programmes EARLY (see closing dates for individual PhD programmes). One possibility is to contact individual researchers and enquire about their research projects. As you probably know, open PhD places can be found for example on http://www.findaphd.com, http://www.jobs.ac.uk, http://www.prospects.ac.uk, http://fens.mdc-berlin.de/jobs/, http://www.naturejobs.com, http://sciencecareers.sciencemag.org/ etc. You can find further advice on the "further study" pages of the UoN Centre for Career Development, see also http://www.nottingham.ac.uk/careers/students/.
Students may also be interested in ...
- the postgraduate conference of the School of Psychology where research students report on their progress (once a year; date for the 2009 conference to be confirmed)
- the internal seminars of the School of Psychology, held by staff members and research students
- The University of Nottingham Centre for Career Development
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