Social Science/Humanities Research Associate II
The University of Texas at Austin · Austin, TX · 3 days ago
Analyst$41k/yrFull-time
About the role
The University of Texas at Austin Mechanisms Underlying Neurocognitive Aging (MUBA) Lab is seeking a highly motivated post-baccalaureate research assistant interested in aging, neuropsychology, dementia prevention, and health disparities research.
Responsibilities
- Assist with general research administration and day-to-day lab operations.
- Support IRB submissions, continuing reviews, and protocol amendments.
- Maintain participant tracking systems and research databases.
- Pull variables and assist with dataset preparation, data cleaning, and coding tasks in R.
- Conduct geocoding and spatial data management procedures using ArcGIS.
- Manage residential history and questionnaire tracking procedures.
- Affiliate with development and coordination of participant newsletters and study communications.
- Schedule research visits and communicate with participants via phone and email.
- Affiliate with cognitive assessment visits and scoring procedures.
- Support MRI research visits and related workflows.
- Prepare and manage incidental findings reports and related documentation.
- Maintain organized, accurate, and confidential study records.
- Affiliate with training and onboarding new research staff.
Requirements
- Prior experience using ArcGIS for geocoding and spatial data management.
- Bachelor's degree and 2 years of related work experience.
- Prior experience working in R for data management, cleaning, or statistical coding.
- Strong organizational and communication skills.
- Attention to detail and ability to manage multiple tasks simultaneously.
- Comfortable interacting with older adult participants.
Preferred Qualifications
- Interest in psychology, neuroscience, aging, public health, medicine, geography/GIS, or related fields.
- Prior research experience preferred.
- Experience with REDCap, longitudinal datasets, or neuropsychological research is helpful.
- Interest in neuropsychology, Alzheimer’s disease, cognitive aging, neighborhood health disparities, or dementia prevention research strongly encouraged.