106 assistant-professor-and-human-computer-interaction Postdoctoral positions at University of Washington
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for these polymers and implement computational algorithms to assist their optimization. The RISE Polymer Lab is dedicated to developing the next generation of robust, intelligent, sustainable, and evolving (RISE
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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
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in membrane trafficking processes in human induced pluripotent stem cells. Position Responsibilities: • Conduct original research in cellular biophysics, particularly in the areas of the actin
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the supervision of a faculty mentor including (but not limited to): Assists with grant preparation and reporting. Prepares and submits papers on research. Assists in the design of research experiments. Evaluates
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/prospective-postdocs-2/ . Trains and conducts research studies under the supervision of a faculty mentor including (but not limited to): Assists with grant preparation and reporting. Prepares and submits papers
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for tissue preparation and multiplexed imaging workflows. Assist in developing novel analytical pipelines or work with computational scientists to interpret complex spatial and single-cell datasets
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dedicated to understanding the molecular mechanisms of ATP-dependent AAA+ proteolytic machines in both bacterial systems and human mitochondria, exploring how these complexes form and achieve substrate
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Position Summary The Kanjee lab is interested in understanding the molecular basis of malaria parasite interactions with host red blood cells that underlie infection and pathogenesis. We apply
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Position Summary The Ding laboratory is seeking a Postdoctoral Research Associate. We are broadly interested in studying enteric virus-host interactions. We investigate the interface of rotavirus
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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