Dear colleagues, please distribute this call!
2 PhD positions in Comparative Cognition
Messerli Research Institute
University of Veterinary Medicine Vienna, Vienna, Austria
1) IMITATION, EMPATHY AND PROSOCIAL BEHAVIOR IN DOGS
The aim of this PhD-project is to investigate the links between imitation, empathy and
prosocial behaviour in dogs. Cognitive scientists have revealed that imitation, emotion
understanding and empathy are tightly linked, and social psychologists found that peoples’
tendency to inadvertently copy each other’s gestures facilitates social interaction. This
project aims at resolving open questions with respect to the ultimate (evolutionary) and
proximate (neuro-cognitive) mechanisms mediating these relationships. These questions are
multi-level in nature and therefore require interdisciplinary approaches and complementary
expertise. Bringing together a team of leading European experts, we will conduct
behavioral experiments on dogs and behavioral and neuroscientific ones in humans. This
part of the project will only involve cognitive-behavioral experiments with dogs. Eligible
candidates will have a master’s degree (or Diplom) in Biology, Veterinary Medicine or
Psychology and research experience in animal behaviour, a genuine understanding of animal
cognition and a strong commitment to basic science. Practical skills in animal training
techniques and in empirical work with dogs are beneficial, but not a precondition. This
PhD project is part of a larger project, funded by the Vienna Science and Technology Fund
(WWTF) on “the evolutionary and neurocognitive basis of the link between imitation,
empathy and prosocial behaviour in dogs and humans”, and conducted together with
psychologists at the University of Vienna (Prof. Lamm) and neuroscientists at the Medical
University of Vienna (Prof. Windischberger). It will be based at the Clever Dog Lab of the
Messerli Research Institute (at the University of Veterinary Medicine Vienna) and
co-supervised by Dr. Friederike Range and Dr. Zsófia Virányi. Principal investigator of
the whole project and supervisor of this PhD-project: Prof. Ludwig Huber.
2) COOPERATIVE COMMUNICATION IN DOGS: MECHANISMS AND GENETIC BASIS
The aim of this PhD-project is to critically investigate the phylogeny of the cognitive
and motivational building blocks of following gaze and pointing as forms of cooperative,
referential and intentional communication, a non-verbal alternative of language that is
available also for non-human animals. The developmental and mechanistic aspects will be
investigated by comparing adult pet dogs and puppies as well as by using sophisticated
technologies, such as eye-tracking and genotyping the oxytocin receptor gene of the
subjects.
As such, the successful candidate will have a master’s degree (or Diplom) in Biology,
Veterinary Medicine or Psychology and research experience in animal behaviour, a genuine
understanding of animal cognition and a strong commitment to basic science. Practical
skills in dog handling and training as well as having a well-trained dog who can act as a
conspecific experimenter are beneficial, but not a precondition.
The position is part of a larger project, funded by the Vienna Science and Technology Fund
(WWTF) on "The semantics of talking with the eyes and gestures: the hormonal and
cognitive underpinnings of comprehending cooperative intentional communication in domestic
dogs and wolves" that complements the PhD project with an evolutionary aspect by
comparing dogs and wolves at the Wolf Science Center (Ernstbrunn, Austria)
(
www.wolfscience.at).
The PhD project will be based at the Clever Dog Lab (
www.cleverdoglab.at) of the Messerli
Research Institute (at the University of Veterinary Medicine Vienna) and will be
co-supervised by Prof. Ludwig Huber, Dr. Friederike Range (Messerli Research Institute)
and Dr. Zsolt Rónai (Semmelweis University, Budapest, Hungary). Principal investigator of
the whole project and supervisor of this PhD-project: Dr. Zsófia Virányi.
The Messerli Research Institute has been recently founded with support of the University
of Veterinary Medicine Vienna, the Medical University of Vienna, the University of Vienna
and the Messerli Foundation (Switzerland) for the scientific study of human-animal
interactions, with an integrative and highly interdisciplinary approach of comparative
cognition and behaviour, comparative medicine, and animal ethics. Its division on
Comparative Cognition (headed by L. Huber) investigates the cognitive abilities in both
the social and physical domain of various, free-living as well as domesticated, animal
species ranging from keas to dogs. At the Clever Dog Lab (
www.cleverdoglab.at) an
international team of students and researchers studies the cognition and behaviour of pet
dogs.
Application: materials including a letter of application, CV, a summary of research
experience, copies of any published or in-press papers, and two letters of recommendation
should be sent to Mrs. Karin Bayer, MSc by email (Karin.Bayer(a)vetmeduni.ac.at) until 1
February 2012. Planned interview dates are in mid February 2012. Both positions are for
three years; starting date is 1 March 2012. Salaries according to the standards of
Austrian basic science funds.
The University of Veterinary Medicine Vienna promotes the employment of women in fields of
work in which they are underrepresented and therefore encourages qualified women to apply
to this opening. Disabled people will be preferentially treated if qualified.