114 assistant-professor-and-human-computer-interaction Postdoctoral positions at University of Washington
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statement of research interests, and contact information for three referees. For questions please email: Dan Zhu, PhD, Research Assistant Professor of Radiology, Assistant Director of MRI Protocols for DISC
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at the University of Washington is seeking a Postdoctoral Scholar in the area of ocean biogeochemistry to work with Professor Anitra Ingalls. The postdoctoral scholar will work within a multi-institution
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imaging program involving molecular oncologists, cancer biologists, computational biologists, and imaging scientists focused on detecting breast cancer and predicting response to therapy. The position is
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virus-host interactions. We have ongoing collaborations with labs in many other departments in the University, including Molecular Microbiology and Pathology & Immunology. Job Description Primary Duties
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about exploring and applying new statistical, computational, or machine learning techniques to astronomical data sets, and extending current methodology to be applicable in the era of big data. Looking
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, Research Assistant Professor of Radiology, Assistant Director of MRI Protocols for DISC, at dzhu6@uw.edu ; Qin Qin, PhD, Research Professor of Radiology, Director of DISC, at qqin@uw.edu . University
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single-cell RNA-seq. The PI is committed to fostering the postdoctoral associate’s career development by providing a highly interactive and collaborative research environment, mentorship for publishing in
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Position Summary The Foltz lab works at the intersection of translational immunology and computational biology. We study mechanisms of response and resistance to natural killer (NK) cell therapies
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the area. The interests of the lab are in understanding how genetic and environmental factors interactions shape mucosal immunity and metabolism. Our approach includes state-of-the-art multiomics, novel
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Position Summary The Lopez laboratory studies viruses and their interaction with their host. Our goal is to understand how the different components of a virus population affect the infected organism