Are you the biomedical science student who is interested in the effects of early life cannabis exposure on brain and behavior? Then you might be the PhD candidate we’re looking for!
Join us!
Although cannabis is generally considered a ‘safe’ drug, there are concerns about its increased potency, with a mean THC concentration that has doubled in the last 20 years. This is especially worrisome when a young brain is exposed to cannabis, since the endocannabinoid system plays an important role in brain development and neuronal finetuning. Recent surveys indicate that pregnant women surprisingly often use cannabis, given its beneficial effects on pain and nausea reduction. THC is, however, rapidly taken up and transferred across the placenta. So far, we are far from understanding the long-term effects this early exposure can have on brain and behavior.
In this project, we aim to better understand how in-utero exposure to THC changes the development of the brain, with a focus on the dopaminergic system, and how later reward and stress coping behavior are influenced. You will be setting up an inhalation (vapour) method of THC exposure in a mouse model, which has translational value and face validity. As experimental readouts, we focus on behavioral parameters like reward-related decision making and stress reactivity and will be looking at developmental brain changes at a cellular and molecular level, from fetal, to adolescent, to adults.
The project is embedded in the framework of the Centre for Urban Mental Health (UMH), an interdisciplinary research center at the UvA, where complexity and dynamics of mental health problems in an urban environment is approached from an integrative angle. In this project we focus on the importance of early life exposure to an external compound that interferes with brain development and later life coping. You will be placed at the Swammerdam Institute for Life Sciences at the Faculty of Sciences of the University of Amsterdam and work in two different thematic groups, the Brain Plasticity and Molecular Neuroscience groups, where you’ll be supervised by Dr. Rixt van der Veen and Dr. Simone Mesman.
What are you going to do?
As a PhD student you will develop into an independent researcher, your tasks and activities will include:
What do we require?
You are/have
Our offer
We offer a temporary contract for 38 hours per week for the duration of 4 years (the initial contract will be for a period of 18 months and after satisfactory evaluation it will be extended for a total duration of 4 years). This should lead to a dissertation (PhD thesis). We will draft an educational plan that includes attendance of courses and (international) meetings. We also expect you to assist in teaching undergraduates and master students.
Your salary will range between €2,901 in the first year to €3,707 gross per month in the last year of employment, based on a fulltime employment (38 hours per week). This sum does not include the 8% holiday pay and the 8.3% end-of-year bonus. A favorable tax agreement, the 30% ruling, may apply to non-Dutch applicants. The Collective Labour Agreement for Dutch Universities (CAO NU) is applicable.
Are you curious about our extensive package of secondary employment benefits like our excellent opportunities for study and development? Take a look here.