Dec 02, 2019
There is an opening for a postdoctoral researcher within Dr. Sarah W. Feldstein Ewing’s Translational Research of Adolescent Change (TRAC) Lab, with opportunities for co-mentorship through Dr. Anna Wilson’s Advancing Research in Pediatric Pain (ARPP) Lab, commencing summer/fall 2020. The Postdoctoral Scholar directly supports a new longitudinal clinical research study examining risk and protective factors for substance abuse in adolescents prescribed opioids for pain management. Generally, the TRAC Lab focuses on understanding how adolescents change their behavior, and how to improve treatments to maximize their behavior change. The ARPP Lab focuses on biopsychosocial models of pediatric pain prevention. A postdoc in this position would have opportunities to work with large, longitudinal, multimethod (e.g., neuroimaging; actigraphy; lab pain testing) datasets.
Required Qualifications:
Ph.D. in clinical psychology, neuropsychology, cognitive/behavioral neuroscience, or related field
Research experience and evidence of productivity, by way of publication
Advanced statistical understanding with demonstrated ability to apply analytical methods to large, multi-modal datasets
Strong scientific writing skills demonstrated through publication history
Excellent documentation skills
Excellent communication skills: both written and verbal
Ability to self-initiate projects and work independently with appropriate oversight
Ability to interface professionally in a collaborative research setting
Proficient computer knowledge to interface with a variety of database, statistical, and imaging task and processing software, such as SPSS, REDCap, Linux, AFNI, FSL, MATLAB
Preferred Qualifications:
Ph.D. in a related field with emphasis in human development and behavior, and quantitative methods
Experience with neuroimaging research
Strong background in neuroimaging (MRI) analysis
Background in computer programming and scripting
Oregon Health & Science University
Portland, OR, USA
Postdoc