In brief, the Eliasmith lab at the Centre for Theoretical Neuroscience has a position available for a 2-year postdoc.  The focus is on large-scale spiking neural models that exhibit interesting behaviors and run on supercomputing infrastructure.  "Interesting behaviour" is broadly defined, including vision, motor control, decision making, any variety of learning, audition, language processing, and so on.

Full details below:

 

SOSCIP/IBM Canada Post-Doctoral Fellow (PDF) Research Scientist

 

Launched in 2012, SOSCIP was founded by seven Ontario universities and IBM Canada Limited as a collaborative research consortium, with a mandate to bring together academic researchers and small- and medium-sized companies to drive innovation using state-of-the-art advanced computing and big data analytics technologies, commercial outcomes for social and economic development in Ontario.  New investments from IBM Canada and other stakeholders have enabled SOSCIP to expand its computing platforms and resources to increase capacity and add new members.  With the addition of our three new academic partners, membership in the consortium has more than doubled over the last two years to 16 organizations.

 

The IBM Canada Research & Development Centre is expanding, and we are seeking a post-doctoral fellow who has a PhD in Theoretical or Computational Neuroscience or a related field, with strong programming skills and experience in high-performance computing environments.  

 

This role will support a research project led by Dr. Chris Eliasmith in the Centre for Theoretical Neuroscience at the University of Waterloo. Dr. Eliasmith's lab constructs state-of-the-art, large-scale, neuron-level models of a wide variety of behaviours, recently publishing what remains the world's largest functional brain model, Spaun, in Science.  These models are simulated in the software Nengo, which is able to run models on a wide variety of hardware platforms, or 'backends', including neuromorphic hardware.  Recently, a backend for BlueGene/Q has been developed, allowing Nengo models, including Spaun, to run on the supercomputers housed at SOSCIP.  The successful candidate will focus on scaling up models, including Spaun, to take full advantage of these hardware resources.  Scaling will include developing theory and implementation of new behaviours, as well as increasing the biological fidelity of Nengo models.  

 

A strong publication record, with demonstrated applications of neural-level models to behaviour (e.g. vision, motor control, memory, decision making, etc.), neuron-level compartmental modeling, various applications of learning (deep learning, reinforcement learning, STDP, etc.), and large-scale modeling are greatly desired.  Familiarity with Python, MPI, and Javascript would be beneficial.

 

 

Education and Experience

-       PhD in Theoretical or Computational Neuroscience, or a related field

-      strong programming skills and experience in high-performance computing environments 

-      experience working as part of a research team

 

 

Work Location:   Waterloo, Ontario

 

Term of Contract:   2-years maximum

 

IBM is committed to creating a diverse environment and is proud to be an equal opportunity employer. All qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, gender, gender identity or expression, sexual orientation, national origin, genetics, disability, age, or veteran status.