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A leading medical research facility in Würzburg is seeking a part-time PhD candidate for the Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry. The role focuses on investigating decision-making noise in youth and ADHD through advanced research methods. Ideal candidates should possess a Master's degree and an interest in clinical neuroscience. The position offers an attractive salary, professional training, and flexible working hours.
Application deadline: 05/12/2025
The University Hospital of Würzburg is looking for a PhD candidate to work part-time (25.03 hours per week) in the Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, starting immediately.
The Neuroscience in Developmental Psychiatry Lab at the Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry of the University Hospital Würzburg, in cooperation with the Department of Neurology at the Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences invites applications for a PhD position within the DFG-funded project “Sources of noise – neurocomputational underpinnings of non-greedy decision-making in youth and ADHD” (PIs: Dr. Maria Waltmann and Prof. Lorenz Deserno). The position is initially funded for 3 years (extension intended).
Background
Human decision-making is remarkably inconsistent: the same person will often make different choices when facing identical situations – for no apparent reason. This seemingly random variability, or “noise”, can have profound real-world consequences. On the milder end, it can lead individuals to occasionally make suboptimal choices (like risky or impulsive decisions). On the more extreme end, excessive noise can create an unpredictability that may undermine a person’s sense of self-efficacy and self-control, and strain relationships with others. Despite its pervasive influence on decision-making, particularly during childhood and adolescence and in common developmental disorders like ADHD, noise remains poorly understood from a neurocomputational perspective. It is typically dismissed as meaningless variance – a methodological nuisance in investigations of learning and decision-making, their development and alterations in psychiatric disorders. This project turns this logic on its head: by treating noise as a signal, we aim to transform it into a source of mechanistic insight, helping us understand why kids make decisions differently than adults, why people with ADHD struggle with impulsive decisions and attentional lapses, and how medications such as methylphenidate may stabilise behaviour.
Research questions
Methods
We employ state-of-the-art methods in cognitive neuroscience, including tailor-made behavioural experiments, neuroimaging using task-based fMRI combined with ECG (capturing heart-brain interactions) and pupillometry (indexing autonomic arousal and noradrenergic activity), analysis using computational models of reinforcement learning, and ecological momentary assessment to link lab-based metrics with real-world behaviour.
This PhD position is ideal for candidates with a strong interest in clinical and developmental applications of cognitive and computational neuroscience, and enthusiasm for interdisciplinary research at the intersection of psychiatry, neuroscience, and computational modelling (“Computational Psychiatry”). The candidate will focus on the clinical aspects of the research programme. They will become part of the Neuroscience in Developmental Psychiatry Lab and work at University Hospital Würzburg under the direct supervision of Lorenz Deserno. They will have access to graduate training opportunities with the Graduate School of Life Science of the University as well as with the Research Training Group on Approach and Avoidance hosted by the Psychology Department. Additional supervision will be provided by Dr. Maria Waltmann.