60 assistant-professor-and-human-computing Postdoctoral positions at University of Washington
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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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, Bioinformatics, Molecular Biology, Developmental Biology, Computational Biology, etc.). Exceptional skills in molecular biology, genomics, human cell culture, and bioinformatics. Preferred Qualifications Education
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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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to Rui Tang, PhD, Assistant Professor at ruit@wustl.edu . Cover letter expressing your interest and highlighting your relevant experience. Curriculum Vitae (CV) with a list of publications. Contact
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pulmonary vascular endothelial cells contributes to pulmonary vascular remodeling. Our current research program includes investigations into the role of hyperactive mTOR (mechanistic target of rapamycin) in
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to three published or unpublished manuscripts Contact details of three academic references For any queries about this position, please reach out to Professor Lorenz Hauser at lhauser@uw.edu . Complete
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academic references For any queries about this position, please reach out to Professor Lorenz Hauser at lhauser@uw.edu . Complete applications received by Oct 31, 2025 will be given preferred consideration
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biologist to join our interdisciplinary team of research biologists, medical doctors, engineers, mathematicians, and computer scientists studying cancer and other human diseases. We are at the forefront
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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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(including Crohn’s disease and ulcerative colitis) using molecular and cell biology, multi-omics technologies, murine models, and human tissues. We currently have three major focuses: 1) Innate lymphoid cells