95 assistant-professor-and-human-computer Postdoctoral positions at University of Washington
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compensation associated with this position may include travel to national or international conferences, computing equipment, and fees associated with manuscript publications, if applicable. A summary of benefits
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with major research universities worldwide as well as with neuro-related industries. The position will work under Dr. Ganesh Chand, Assistant Professor of Radiology, within WashU in St. Louis School
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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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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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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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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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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. The postdoctoral associate will work in
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, tumor immunology organotypic in-vitro models, genetically engineered animal models and human tissues from clinical trials. All these approaches are brought to bear on impactful questions in tumor
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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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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