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[EXPIRED] The Capital Region of Copenhagen is looking for a 2-year research assistant in precision brain imaging in Parkinsons's disease

Our team has made major progress in imaging the involvement of the substantia nigra and locus coeruleus in Parkinson´s disease over recent years.

Are you interested to become a part of our team and that continuously pushes the frontiers of precision MRI of the human brain and Parkinson’s disease at 3T and 7T?

Are you eager to work in a dynamic research environment in the Movement Disorders group and to leverage a unique clinical and  MRI infrastructure?

Do you thrive in multi-disciplinary environments where you closely interact with collaborators at the department, but also internationally?
If yes, we would like to see your application.

The Danish Research Centre for Magnetic Resonance (DRCMR) has an open research opportunity for a highly motivated research assistant to conduct cutting-edge research in clinical neuroscience and magnetic resonance imaging.

We are looking for a candidate who will help us acquire and analyze structural and functional MRI data in healthy participants and patients with Parkinson’s disease. You will have the opportunity to collaborate with an interdisciplinary team consisting of M.D.s, psychologists, physiologists, engineers, and basic- and clinical neuroscientists. You will join the Movement Disorders group led by Research Fellow David Meder as well as the ADAPT-PD project group led by Prof. Hartwig Siebner. Here, you will contribute to our efforts to map the changes in functional brain networks in Parkinson’s disease patients. Furthermore, you will aid our continuous work on ultra-high field (7 tesla) imaging of structural changes in midbrain nuclei in different stages of the disease. The employment may lay the foundation for an extension into a PhD position.

About us:

The Danish Research Centre for Magnetic Resonance (DRCMR) is one of the leading research centers for biomedical MRI in Europe (www.drcmr.dk). Our interdisciplinary research is geared to triangulate between MR physics, basic physiology, and clinical research. Approximately 70 researchers from a diverse range of disciplines are currently pursuing basic and clinically applied MR research with a focus on structural, functional, and metabolic MRI of the human brain and its disorders.

Collaboration is key at DRCMR – we do not expect any researcher to be able to do everything alone, but we expect everyone to be interested in sharing knowledge with colleagues.

The DRCMR is embedded in the Department of Radiology and Nuclear Medicine, a large diagnostic imaging department including all biomedical imaging modalities at Copenhagen University Hospital Hvidovre. The hospital also has strong collaborative links with the Technical University of Denmark and is part of the newly established organizational framework, The Technical University Hospital of Greater Copenhagen. DRCMR has close interaction with clinicians and radiologists and a state-of-the-art MR-research infrastructure, which includes a pre-clinical 7T MR scanner, six whole-body MR scanners (one 7T, four 3T and one 1.5T scanners), a hardware workshop and laboratory, a neuropsychology laboratory, an EEG laboratory, and two laboratories for non-invasive brain stimulation.  The 7T is a national research infrastructure, serving internal and external users across Denmark.                                                                                                                                                             

The position:

You will be employed as a research assistant for a two-year period at the Danish Research Centre for Magnetic Resonance with good possibilities of extension.

Your daily tasks will vary according to the flow of the projects, but will mainly be centered around:

  • conducting functional MRI experiments with healthy participants and patients with Parkinson’s disease at 3T
  • conducting structural MRI experiments with healthy participants and patients with Parkinson’s disease at 7T
  • analyzing functional and structural MRI and behavioral data
  • engaging in teaching, knowledge dissemination, and publication of results in international, recognized scientific journals

The ideal candidate

  • You hold a MSc degree in medicine, neuroscience, biomedical engineering or a related field.
  • You have excellent written and interpersonal communication skills.
  • You enjoy being part of a multidisciplinary and international research team where flexibility, coordination skills and helping each other out are key comptencies.

A major advantage would be experience in any of the following:

  • experience with MR data acquisition and analysis
  • experience working with patients with Parkinson's disease or other movement disorders.
  • programming skills (preferably in Matlab or Python)

The project will be supervised by Research Fellow David Meder and Prof. Hartwig Siebner.

 

Selected Publications

Gregersen, F., Eroğlu, H. H., Göksu, C., Puonti, O., Zuo, Z., Thielscher, A. & Hanson, L. G.
MR imaging of the magnetic fields induced by injected currents can guide improvements of individualized head volume conductor models.
Imaging Neuroscience. 2, p. 1-15, https://doi.org/10.1162/imag_a_00176 (2024).

Göksu, C., Gregersen, F., Scheffler, K., Eroğlu, H. H., Heule, R., Siebner, H. R., Hanson, L. G. & Thielscher, A. Volumetric measurements of weak current-induced magnetic fields in the human brain at high resolution. Magn Reson Med.  DOI: 10.1002/mrm.29780 (2023).

Hosseini, S., Puonti, O., Treeby, B., Hanson, L. G. & Thielscher, A.
A Head Template for Computational Dose Modelling for Transcranial Focused Ultrasound Stimulation. NeuroImage. p. 120227. DOI: 0.1016/j.neuroimage.2023.120227 (2023).

Rahbek, S., Mahmood, F., Tomaszewski, M. R., Hanson, L. G. & Madsen, K. H. Decomposition-based framework for tumor classification and prediction of treatment response from longitudinal MRI, Phys in Med and Biol. DOI: 10.1088/1361-6560/acaa85, 2023.

Rahbek, S., Schakel, T., Mahmood, F., Madsen, K. H., Philippens, M. E. P. & Hanson, L. G. Optimized flip angle schemes for the split acquisition of fast spin-echo signals (SPLICE) sequence and application to diffusion-weighted imaging. Magn Reson Med, DOI: 10.1002/mrm.29545, 2023.

Laustsen, M., Andersen M., Xue, R., Madsen, K. H., & Hanson, L. G.Tracking of rigid head motion during MRI using an EEG system, Magn Reson Med, DOI: 10.1002/mrm.29251, 2022.

Gregersen, F., Göksu, C., Schaefers, G., Xue, R., Thielscher A., & Hanson L. G., Safety evaluation of a new setup for Transcranial Electric Stimulation during Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Brain Stimulation. 14, 3, p. 488-497, 2021.

Göksu, C., Scheffler, K., Gregersen, F., Eroğlu, H. H., Heule, R., Siebner, H. R., Hanson, L. G. & Thielscher, A. Sensitivity and resolution improvement for in vivo magnetic resonance current-density imaging of the human brain. Magn. Reson. Med. 86, p. 3131-3146, 2021.

Rahbek, S., Madsen, K. H., Lundell, H., Mahmood, F. & Hanson, L. G. Data-driven separation of MRI signal components for tissue characterization. J. Mag. Res. 333, p. 1-11. 2021.

Busoni, S., Bock, M., Chmelik, M., Colgan, N., De Bondt, T., Hanson, L. G., Israel, M., Kugel, H., Maieron, M., Mazzoni, L. N., Seimenis, I. & Vestergaard, P. ADDENDUM to EFOMP Policy statement No.14 "The role of the Medical Physicist in the management of safety within the magnetic resonance imaging environment: EFOMP recommendations". Physica Medica. 89, p. 303-305, 2021.

Sánchez-Heredia, J. D., Olin, R. B., McLean, M. A., Laustsen, C., Hansen A., Hanson, L.G., & Ardenkjaer-Larsen, J. H., Multi-Site Benchmarking of Clinical 13C RF Coils at 3 T, J Magn Reson, 318:106798, 2020.

Olin, R. B., Sánchez-Heredia, J. D., Schulte, R. F., Bøgh, N., Hansen, E. S. S., Laustsen, C., Hanson, L. G. & Ardenkjaer-Larsen, J. H. Three-dimensional accelerated acquisition for hyperpolarized 13 C MR  with blipped stack-of-spirals and conjugate-gradient  SENSE. Magn Reson Med 84, p. 519-34, 2020.

Pedersen, J. O., Hanson, C. G., Xue, R. & Hanson, L. G. Inductive measurement and encoding of k-space trajectories in MR raw data. MAGMA 32, p. 655-667, 2019.

Göksu, C., Scheffler K., Siebner H. R., Thielscher, A., & Hanson, L. G. The stray magnetic fields in Magnetic Resonance Current Density Imaging (MRCDI), Phys Med 59, p. 142-150, 2019.

Pedersen, J. O., Hanson, C. G., Xue, R. & Hanson, L. G. Regularization of Digitally Integrated, Inductive k-Space Trajectory Measures.
ISMRM 27th Annual Meeting & Exhibition 2019.

Pasquinelli, C., Hanson, L. G., Siebner, H. R., Lee, H. J. & Thielscher, A. Safety of transcranial focused ultrasound stimulation: A systematic review of the state of knowledge from both human and animal studies. Brain Stimulation. 12, 6, p. 1367-13802019.

Hansen, R. B., Sánchez-Heredia, J. D., Bøgh, N., Hansen, E. S. S., Laustsen C., L. G. Hanson & Ardenkjær-Larsen,  J. H. Coil profile estimation strategies for parallel imaging with hyperpolarized 13 C MRI, Magn Reson Med 82, p. 2104-17, 2019.

Göksu, C., Scheffler K., Siebner H. R., Thielscher, A., & Hanson, L.G. The stray magnetic fields in Magnetic Resonance Current Density Imaging (MRCDI), Phys Med 59, 142-150, 2019.

Magnusson, P., Boer, V., Marsman, A., Paulson, O. B., Hanson, L. G. & Petersen, E. T. Gamma-aminobutyric acid edited echo-planar spectroscopic imaging (EPSI) with MEGA-sLASER at 7T, Magn Reson Med, 81(2), p. 773-780, 2019.

Pedersen, J. O. Encoding of non-MR signals in Magnetic Resonance Imaging data. PhD thesis, Technical University of Denmark, Electrical Engineering, 2018.

Pedersen, J. O., Hanson, C. G., Xue, R.  & Hanson, L. G. General Purpose Electronics for Real-Time Processing and encoding of non-MR Data in MR Acquisitions, Concepts in Magn Reson B, 48B(2), e21385, 2018.

Eldirdiri, A., Posse, S., Hanson, L. G., Hansen, R. B., Holst, P., Schøier, C., Kristensen, A. T., Johannesen, H. H., Kjaer, A., Hansen, A. E.  & Ardenkjær-Larsen, J. H. Development of a Symmetric Echo Planar Spectroscopic Imaging Framework for Hyperpolarized 13C Imaging in a Clinical PET/MR Scanner, Tomography, 4(3), p. 110-22, 20184(3), p. 110-22, 2018.

Wilhjelm J. E., Duun-Henriksen J. & Hanson L. G., A virtual scanner for teaching fundamental magnetic resonance in biomedical engineering, Comput Appl Eng Educ, 26(6), p. 2197-2209, 2018

Göksu, C., Hanson, L. G., Siebner, H. R., Ehses, P., Scheffler, K. & Thielscher, A. Human in-vivo brain magnetic resonance current density imaging (MRCDI). NeuroImage. 171, p. 26-39, 2018.

Göksu C, Scheffler K, Ehses P, Hanson L.G & Thielscher A. Sensitivity Analysis of Magnetic Field Measurements for Magnetic Resonance Electrical Impedance Tomography (MREIT), Magnetic Resonance in Medicine. 79, p. 748-760, 2018.

Laustsen, M., Andersen, M., Lehmann, P. M., Xue, R., Madsen, K. H. & Hanson, L. G. Slice-wise motion tracking during simultaneous EEG-fMRI. Joint Annual Meeting ISMRM-ESMRMB 2018.

Petersen, J. R., Pedersen, J. O., Zhurbenko, V., Ardenkjær-Larsen, J. H. & Hanson, L. G. Ultra-low power transmitter for encoding non-MR signals in Magnetic Resonance  recordings. Joint Annual Meeting ISMRM-ESMRMB 2018.

Göksu, C., Hanson, L. G., Siebner, H. R., Ehses, P., Scheffler, K. & Thielscher, A. Comparison of two alternative sequences for human in-vivo brain MR Current Density Imaging (MRCDI). Joint Annual Meeting ISMRM-ESMRMB 2018.

Göksu, C., Hanson, L. G., Siebner, H. R., Ehses, P., Scheffler, K. & Thielscher, A. Human In-vivo Brain MR Current Density Imaging (MRCDI) based on Steady-state Free Precession Free Induction Decay (SSFP-FID). Joint Annual Meeting ISMRM-ESMRMB 2018.

Andersen, M., Hanson, L. G., Madsen, K. H., Wezel, J., Boer, V., van der Velden, T., van Osch, M. J. P., Klomp, D., Webb, A. G. & Versluis, M. J. Measuring motion-induced B0 -fluctuations in the brain using field probes. Magnetic Resonance in Medicine, 75(5):2020-30, 2016.

Andersen, M., Towards Motion-Insensitive Magnetic Resonance Imaging Using Dynamic Field Measurements. PhD thesis, Technical University of Denmark, Electrical Engineering. 109 p., 2016.

Hanson, L. G. The Ups and Downs of Classical and Quantum Formulations of Magnetic Resonance. Book chapter in Anthropic Awareness: The Human Aspects of Scientific Thinking in NMR Spectroscopy and Mass Spectrometry. Edited by: C Szantay, Jr. Elsevier, Chap. 3, p. 141-171, 2015.

de Nijs, R., Miranda, MJ., Hansen, LK., Hanson, LG. Motion correction of single-voxel spectroscopy by independent component analysis applied to spectra from nonanesthetized pediatric subjects. Magn Reson Med 2009, 62(5), 1147-1154.

Hanson, LG. Is quantum mechanics necessary for understanding magnetic resonance? Concepts in Magnetic Resonance Part A 2008, 32A(5), 329-340.

Hanson, LG. A graphical simulator for teaching basic and advanced MR imaging techniques. Radiographics 2007, 27(6), e27.

Hanson, LG., Lund, TE., Hanson, CG. Encoding of electrophysiology and other signals in MR images. J. Magn Reson Imaging 2007, 25(5), 1059-1066. 

Hanson, LG., Lund, TE., Hanson, CG. Encoding and transmission of signals as RF signals for detection using an MR apparatus. WO/2005/116676, PCT/DK2005/000343 2005.

Andersen, IK., Szymkowiak, A., Rasmussen, CE., Hanson, LG., Marstrand, JR., Larsson, HB. & Hansen, LK. Perfusion quantification using Gaussian process deconvolution. Magn Reson Med 2002, 48(2), 351-361.

Hanson, LG., Adalsteinsson, E., Pfefferbaum, A., Spielman, DM. Optimal voxel size for measuring global gray and white matter proton metabolite concentrations using chemical shift imaging. Magn Reson Med 2000, 44(1), 10-18.

Hanson, LG., Schaumburg, K., Paulson, OB. Reconstruction strategy for echo planar spectroscopy and its application to partially undersampled imaging. Magn Reson Med 2000, 44(3), 412-417.

News & Events

Group Members

Lars G. Hanson

Group Leader

External Collaborators

Section for MR, DTU Health Tech

Technical University of Denmark, Lyngby


Institute of Biophysics

Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, China


Max Planck Institute for Biological Cybernetics

Tübingen, Germany