114 assistant-professor-and-human-centered-computing Postdoctoral positions at University of Washington
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. Computational and bioinformatic skills. Experience in microscopy. Generation and analysis of mouse models. Handling of human samples. Molecular biology skills including CRISPR, cloning and qPCR. In vitro cell
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departmental core facilities, as well as to the great research community in one of the top medical schools in the USA. Job Description Primary Duties & Responsibilities: Information on being a postdoc at WashU
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Center for Reproductive Health Sciences (CRepHS). Our lab is focused on overcoming chemotherapy resistance in gynecologic cancers by targeting DNA damage repair mechanisms. We specifically are interested
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, establish advanced manufacturing routes for these polymers and implement computational algorithms to assist their optimization. The RISE Polymer Lab is dedicated to developing the next generation of robust
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will contribute to our overall goal of advancing novel therapeutic targets for neurodegenerative disease. Candidates with backgrounds in computational biology, stem cell biology, or neuroscience
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technologies, computational genomics, functional assays, and integrated data analysis. We are seeking a highly motivated Postdoctoral Researcher who shares our passion for solving foundational problems in human
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neutrinos with an emphasis on discovering physics beyond the Standard Model. The Center hosts a broad program including LEGEND, He6-CRES, Project 8, Selena, PIONEER, and others. Our professional engineering
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Position Summary The Cruchaga Lab at WashU Medicine is recruiting multiple Postdoctoral Research Associates. The NeuroGenomics and Informatics Center generates and analyzes Whole-Genome Sequencing
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biochemistry, genomics, molecular genetics, cell biology, and model organism systems to uncover the mechanisms by which histone mutations disrupt human development and lead to disease. Our ultimate goal is to
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on exoplanets. The position will be supervised by Professors David Catling and Joshua Krissansen-Totton. This theory project is funded by the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation and does not depend on federal grants