RESEARCH SCIENTIST
Durham, NC, US, 27710
Be You.
A fully funded Research Scientist position is immediately available in the laboratory of Dr. Stephen Harward within the Departments of Neurosurgery and Neurobiology at the Duke University School of Medicine. We are seeking an exceptional, highly motivated scientist to take a senior, leadership role in advancing the development and application of focused ultrasound (FUS) for non-invasive neuromodulation, ablation, and targeted brain drug/gene delivery.
This position is ideal for a candidate eager to lead independent, high-impact projects at the intersection of basic neuroscience, engineering, and clinical translation. The successful applicant will function as a senior scientific member of the lab, contributing intellectually to the lab’s direction while mentoring junior trainees and working closely with Dr. Harward to develop new research initiatives and competitive grant applications.
Key Responsibilities
· Design, execute, and analyze independent research projects focused on focused ultrasound–based neuromodulation and brain circuit manipulation.
· Serve as a scientific lead within the laboratory, providing mentorship and oversight for undergraduates, medical students, technicians, and junior trainees.
· Collaborate closely with the PI to develop new research directions, experimental strategies, and translational applications.
· Contribute substantively to grant writing (NIH and foundation-level) and manuscript preparation.
· Present research findings at lab meetings, departmental seminars, and national/international scientific conferences.
· Help maintain a rigorous, collaborative, and intellectually vibrant lab environment.
Be Bold.
Minimum Qualifications
· Ph.D. or equivalent doctoral degree (e.g., Sc.D., M.D., D.V.M.) in neuroscience, neurobiology, biomedical engineering, or a related biomedical field.
· At least 5 years of postdoctoral research experience conducting independent scientific research.
· Record of multiple peer-reviewed publications demonstrating significant and substantive scientific contributions.
· Demonstrated ability to independently design and carry out complex experiments.
· Strong written and verbal communication skills.
Preferred Qualifications
· Background in neuroscience or translational neurobiology, particularly circuit-level or systems neuroscience.
· Experience with one or more of the following: focused ultrasound, in vivo mouse models, electrophysiology, calcium imaging, viral approaches, optogenetics, or molecular biology techniques (DNA, RNA, protein, epigenetics).
· Prior experience mentoring or supervising trainees.
· Interest in clinically relevant or translational research and collaborative team science.
Lab Background
The Harward Laboratory is a high-energy, collaborative translational neuroscience lab focused on understanding how synaptic plasticity contributes to neurological disease and how it can be precisely modulated to achieve disease modification (Harward et al., Nature 2016; Hedrick et al., Nature 2016; Krishnamurthy et al., Annals of Neurology 2019).
A central focus of the lab is the development of focused ultrasound as a next-generation, non-invasive neuromodulation technology. While FUS is already FDA-approved for lesion-based treatment of Essential Tremor and Parkinson’s disease, emerging evidence demonstrates that lower-intensity paradigms can be used to transiently open the blood–brain barrier, modulate immune responses, and selectively influence neurons, interneurons, astrocytes, and microglia with sub-millimeter precision.
Building on these advances, our lab seeks to optimize focused ultrasound as a therapeutic and investigative tool for a broad range of conditions, including epilepsy, neuropsychiatric disease, movement disorders, chronic pain, and brain tumors. To achieve these goals, we employ a diverse experimental toolkit including mouse genetics, viral strategies, in vitro and in vivo models, electrophysiology, calcium imaging, optogenetics, and focused ultrasound–based approaches.
About the Principal Investigator
Dr. Stephen Harward is an Assistant Professor in the Departments of Neurosurgery and Neurobiology and serves as the Director of Focused Ultrasound Research at the Duke University School of Medicine. He is a neurosurgeon-scientist whose clinical and research programs are centered on the development and application of novel neuromodulatory technologies.
Clinically, Dr. Harward treats patients with Essential Tremor, Parkinson’s disease, dystonia, and epilepsy, and has extensive experience using a range of neuromodulatory therapies, including focused ultrasound. His laboratory integrates basic neuroscience discovery with direct clinical translation, offering a uniquely rich environment for scientists interested in impactful, patient-oriented research.
Environment & Opportunities
Duke University provides an outstanding, highly collaborative research environment with strong institutional support for translational neuroscience, access to state-of-the-art core facilities, and close integration between basic science and clinical departments. This position offers substantial opportunities for scientific independence, leadership development, and career advancement within a growing neuromodulation research program
Choose Duke.
Duke is an Equal Opportunity Employer committed to providing employment opportunity without regard to an individual's age, color, disability, gender, gender expression, gender identity, genetic information, national origin, race, religion, sex (including pregnancy and pregnancy related conditions), sexual orientation or military status.
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Certain jobs at Duke University and Duke University Health System may include essential job functions that require specific physical and/or mental abilities. Additional information and provision for requests for reasonable accommodation will be provided by each hiring department.
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