Research Assistant
Nudge
Location
San Francisco
Employment Type
Full time
Location Type
On-site
Department
ResearchClinical Study Operations
About Nudge
At Nudge, our mission is to develop the best technology for interfacing with the brain to improve people's lives. We're starting with an approach that we believe can help the most people the fastest, and also allow us to learn as much about the brain as possible: developing a non-invasive, ultrasound-based device that can stimulate and image the brain at high resolution and depth. This is a vertically integrated effort building cutting-edge hardware, software, and research capabilities to create products that can benefit millions — and eventually billions — of people.
We’ve brought together a team of the best, who believe hard things are worth doing. To succeed, we need to assemble world-class teams across everything we do. We hire people who are exceptional at their craft, do the real work, and execute relentlessly — people who expect the highest levels of both rigor and integrity from each other.
About the role
Work closely with research and engineering teams to run high-quality data collection for studies and R&D experiments.
Execute experimental protocols: administer cognitive tasks and collect imaging/physiological data in clinical and non-clinical populations.
Manage participant workflow end to end: recruitment, screening, scheduling, and informed consent.
Learn and operate neuromodulation and imaging systems, follow SOPs, and maintain equipment logs.
Contribute to documentation, data quality checks, and analysis to support next-generation neurotechnology development.
About you
2+ years of relevant research/clinical/lab experience (academic or industry)
Bachelor’s degree in a science, math, or engineering field (including neuroscience, cognitive science, psychology, computer science), or equivalent experience
Demonstrated history of exceptional contributions in your prior work experiences
Strong interpersonal and communication skills
Experience with data collection and analysis