Under the supervision of Dr. Brown-Schmidt, the Lab Coordinator is part of the Conversation Laboratory in Psychology and Human Development Department at Vanderbilt University and is responsible for coordinating and overseeing laboratory research. The Lab Coordinator will assist in supervising research assistants, stimulus development, experimental design, data collection and analysis, initial interpretation of results, preparation of publications, as well as other administrative tasks. The Lab Coordinator will be responsible for making sure the equipment in the lab is up to date and running correctly and will assist in coordination with the Dr. Duff Lab (at VUMC) once experiments have been prepared for running on patients and comparisons. The coordinator is a key contributor responsible for every aspect of research in the lab including recruiting participants, running participants, coding and analyzing data, supervising undergraduate assistants, and purchasing and maintaining lab equipment. The Peabody Department of Psychology and Human Development is a group of scholars who work to increase understanding of basic psychological functioning and neuropsychological development in family, school, and other social contexts. Several programs, which are included in the Psychological Sciences major offered jointly with the Department of Psychology in the College of Arts and Science, include clinical science, cognitive and cognitive neuroscience, developmental science, neuroscience, and quantitative methods and evaluation. The department also is the home of Master of Science programs in Cognitive Psychology in Context and Quantitative Methods as well as undergraduate majors in Language Sciences, Cognitive Studies, and Child Studies. The research efforts of the department are focused on increasing understanding of basic psychological processes in different contexts. Department faculty are accomplished and nationally known. Many serve as editors of psychological journals, members of national review panels, and leaders in national organizations. All are authors of numerous scientific articles and chapters. While faculty members in Psychology share a common interest in psychological processes and their development, our specific interests and expertise are diverse. Some are committed to increasing understanding of basic psychological processes, while others emphasize implications for clinical, social, and educational issues. All are committed to building a diverse and inclusive department. The Conversation Lab in the Department of Psychology and Human Development investigates the cognitive and neural underpinnings of everyday language use including ongoing projects on conversation, language, perspective-taking, and the impact of brain damage on these processes. The lab uses a variety of methods, including referential communication tasks, eye-tracking and visual world paradigms, research with patient populations, brain imaging, and reading experiments.