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Professor

Magdalena Sauvage

Has open position

Prof. Dr. at Leibniz Institute for Neurobiology

Leibniz Institute for Neurobiology

Germany

email-of-the@professor.com

Research Interests

Behavioral Neuroscience

20%

Hippocampus

20%

Memory Formation

20%

Optogenetics

20%

Transgenic Animal Models

20%

Electrophysiology

20%

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Positions(2)

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Magdalena Sauvage

Leibniz Institute for Neurobiology

.

Germany

PhD Student (f/m/d) – Neural Basis of Memory (Neurosciences)

The Leibniz Institute for Neurobiology (LIN) in Magdeburg, Germany, is internationally recognized for its research on learning and memory, spanning molecular, cellular, network, and behavioral levels. In collaboration with the SFB 1436 'Neural Resources of Cognition' and the Research Group Functional Architecture of Memory (FAM) led by Prof. Dr. Magdalena Sauvage, this PhD position focuses on the neural basis of memory. The department investigates the roles of medial temporal lobe areas (CA1, CA3, DG, MEC, LEC, PrC, POR) in memory processes across health, aging, and animal models of amnesia. Research topics include memory for time, space, and episodes, as well as consolidation and reconsolidation. Recent findings from the group have identified new spatial and non-spatial subnetworks in the hippocampus and proposed network shifts in memory retrieval as memories age. Techniques used include behavioral and molecular approaches, optogenetics, high-resolution molecular imaging (IEG detection), in-vivo electrophysiology, and fMRI in awake rodents. The SFB 1436 subproject B07 specifically investigates circuit-specific improvements in spatial and non-spatial memory involving entorhino-hippocampal subnetworks, using optogenetic manipulations, IEG imaging, and electrophysiology data analysis in mice, with links to human and rat studies. The lab communicates in English and collaborates with national and international partners, offering a multidisciplinary and supportive environment. Magdeburg provides excellent facilities for cognitive and systems neuroscience, including advanced imaging technologies. The successful candidate will receive support through the graduate school (IRTG) and work closely with the German Centre for Neurodegenerative Diseases. The position is funded for three years at 65% TV-L E13, with welfare benefits. Applicants should have an MSc in Neurosciences, Life Sciences, or related fields, experience in behavioral and molecular techniques, programming skills (Matlab/Python), and willingness to work with animal models. Applications are accepted until the position is filled. LIN is committed to equal opportunities and diversity.

Publisher
source

Magdalena Sauvage

Leibniz Institute for Neurobiology

.

Germany

PhD Student in Neural Basis of Memory (Neurosciences)

The Leibniz Institute for Neurobiology (LIN) in Magdeburg, Germany, is offering a PhD position in the research group Functional Architecture of Memory (FAM), led by Prof. Dr. Magdalena Sauvage. The institute is internationally recognized for its research on learning and memory, spanning molecular, cellular, network, and behavioral levels. This PhD project is part of the SFB 1436, Neural Resources of Cognition, supported by the German Research Foundation, and focuses on the neural basis of memory, particularly the roles of different medial temporal lobe areas (CA1, CA3, DG, MEC, LEC, PrC, POR) in memory processes in health, aging, and animal models of amnesia. The group investigates memory for time, space, and episodes, as well as memory consolidation and reconsolidation, using advanced techniques such as optogenetics, high-resolution molecular imaging (immediate-early gene detection), in-vivo electrophysiology, and fMRI in awake rodents. The SFB 1436 subproject B07 specifically explores circuit-specific improvements in spatial and non-spatial memory involving entorhino-hippocampal subnetworks, with close links to related projects in human and animal electrophysiology and imaging. The lab's working language is English, and it maintains strong collaborations with national and international partners, including the German Centre for Neurodegenerative Diseases and leading neuroscience groups in the USA, Austria, and Germany. The successful candidate will benefit from a vibrant, multidisciplinary environment, access to state-of-the-art imaging facilities, and support from the graduate school (IRTG). The position is funded for three years (TV-L E13, 65% part-time, 26 hours/week), starting January 1st, 2026 or earlier for the right candidate. Applicants should have a MSc in Neurosciences, Life Sciences, or a related field, experience in behavioral and molecular techniques, programming skills (Matlab/Python), willingness to work with animal models, and strong interest in interdisciplinary research. Excellent English is required. Applications (motivation letter, CV, certificates, publication list, and three references) should be sent to jessica.levin@lin-magdeburg.de. For questions, contact Prof. Dr. Magdalena Sauvage (magdalena.sauvage@lin-magdeburg.de). Applications are reviewed on a rolling basis until the position is filled. The LIN is committed to equal opportunities and diversity.

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