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| Location: | Birmingham / United Kingdom / View location on map ▾ Hide location on map ▴ | ||
| Duration: | 12 months | Start Date: | Anytime |
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| Languages: | English | ||
Understanding brain function and brain diseases are major intellectual and practical challenges facing mankind. Neuroscience in the School of Clinical and Experimental Medicine has research strengths in:
* Neurodegenerative diseases
* Neurodegeneration and repair
* Neuronal function and dysfunction
* Psychiatry
It spans basic and clinical research, at levels of analysis from the molecular to the whole organism. It has strong collaborative links with the Birmingham Clinical Trials Unit and with the wider neuroscience community in the Colleges of Life and Environmental Sciences and Engineering.
Research is performed in specialised laboratories for:
* Molecular neurology
* Molecular neuroscience
* Cellular neuroscience
* Cellular and systems electrophysiology
* Imaging and neuropharmacology
Clinical studies are centred on the Clinical Neuroscience Unit in the Queen Elizabeth Hospital, the Academic Psychiatry Unit in the Barberry Psychiatric Hospital, and through field teams based at the Barberry.
Key facts
Type of Course: Doctoral research
Duration: PhD – 3 years full-time, 6 years part-time; MPhil – 1 year full-time, 2 years part-time
Start date: Research degrees may start at any time of the year, though for most this will be September 2012
Research interests of staff
* Investigation of the molecular mechanisms underlying chronic neurodegenerative diseases such as Parkinson's disease and motor neurone disease; candidate gene screening approaches to various neurological disorders. Contact: Professor Karen Morrison
Email: k.morrison@bham.ac.uk
* Clinical trials of therapies in Parkinson’s and motor neurone disease. Contact: Professor Karen Morrison
Email: k.morrison@bham.ac.uk
Professor Carl Clarke
Email: c.e.clarke@bham.ac.uk
* Cellular and genetic mechanisms underlying Alzheimer’s disease; developmental causes of epilepsy. Contact: Dr Zsuzsanna Nagy
Email: z.nagy@bham.ac.uk
* Clinical trials of therapies (pharmacological and surgical) in Parkinson's disease. Contact: Dr Carl Clarke
Email: c.e.clarke@bham.ac.uk
* Acute trauma, and neurodegeneration; understanding mechanisms of natural ageing; evaluation of novel gene- and cell-based therapeutic strategies for central nervous system (CNS) repair. Contact: Professor Ann Logan
Email: a.logan@bham.ac.uk
Dr Ana-Maria Gonzalez
Email: a.m.gonzalez.1@bham.ac.uk
* Basic mechanisms of temporal lobe epilepsy; fast physiological oscillations associated with cognition; physiology and pathophysiology of prion protein; effects of electric fields on brain function; pathophysiology of X-linked mental retardation. Contact: Professor John Jefferys
Email: j.g.r.jefferys@bham.ac.uk
Dr Andrew Powell
Email: a.d.powell@bham.ac.uk
* Structure and operation of cortical networks investigated by cellular electrophysiology, immunohistochemistry, and light and electron microscopy; physiological oscillations associated with cognition; basic mechanisms of epilepsy; quantification of synaptic networks. Contact: Professor Attila Sik
Email: a.sik@bham.ac.uk
* Role of intracellular calcium pools in integration of neuronal functions; mitochondrial function in normal ageing and aged neurons. Contact: Dr Emil Toescu
Email: e.c.toescu@bham.ac.uk
* Panic, neurosteroids and the female brain; cerebral circulation. Contact: Dr Thelma Lovick
Email: t.a.lovick@bham.ac.uk
* Basic mechanisms of temporal lobe epilepsy; fast physiological oscillations associated with cognition; neurophysiology of normal ageing. Contact: Dr Martin Vreugdenhil
Email: m.vreugdenhil@bham.ac.uk
You are normally required to take an English Proficiency Test.
Most European Universities recognise the IELTS test.
Take testEnglish language requirements
* IELTS 7.0 with no less than 6.5 in any band
* TOEFL 600 Paper-based test /250 Computer-based test
| Minimal degree required: | Bachelor's degree |
| Minimal amount of work experience | Not specified |
| Cambridge English: Advanced (CAE): | Grade A (Score: 80) |
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