Neuroimaging

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MPhil/PhD

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Part Time, Full Time

Institute of Psychiatry
RESEARCH PROFILE
  • Number of academic staff: 11.
  • Number of research students: 15.

Neuroimaging at the IoP is world-renowned. The Department is embedded in the Centre for Neuroimaging Sciences, a joint venture between the IoP and the South London and Maudsley NHS Foundation Trust (SLaM). The Centre provides, under one roof, an interdisciplinary research environment that combines the development of high resolution structural, functional and metabolic mapping techniques, with expertise in the definition, diagnosis and treatment of neurological and psychiatric disorders. The CNS houses dedicated GE Signa HD.x MRI scanners (one 1.5T and two 3T, with direct access to an additional 3T), capable of performing functional, spectroscopic, anatomical and pathological mapping techniques. A 7T pre-clinical MRI system is based at the James Black centre on the Denmark Hill Campus.

Current research projects span neurodegeneration, epilepsy, stroke, pain, psychosis, affective disorders, developmental disorders and normal brain function, using a battery of neuroimaging techniques which include perfusion, diffusion, functional and structural imaging. Complementary research in imaging physics and analysis supports these applications.

Basic scientific research is also performed in models of neuropsychiatric disease, again using a diverse array of neuroimaging techniques, including pharmacological MRI and spectroscopy techniques. In conjunction with non-MR methods such as microscopy and autoradiography, this multifaceted approach enhances our understanding of the patho-physiological mechanisms underlying disease and informs the development of novel therapeutic interventions. In addition, improved understanding of the biological processes that underlie MR signal changes advances the crucial role of MR in non-invasive assessment of neuropsychiatric disease.

Our long-term objective is to translate our on-going pre-clinical developments in neuroimaging to the clinic, improving diagnosis and treatment of psychiatric and neurological diseases.

KEY FACTS
Head of group/division
Professor Steve Williams
Awarding institution
King's College London
Duration
Three years FT; six years PT. Accelerated PT rates available - email iop.educationsupport@kcl.ac.uk for further information. Registration is carried out at four points in the year: October, January, April and July.
Location
Denmark Hill Campus.
Student destinations
Students can follow a variety of career paths including academic positions as such as postdoctorate researchers, lecturers and above, as well as positions within the NHS and Industry (specifically pharmaceutical industry and equipment manufacturers).
Year of entry 2013
Offered by
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