121 assistant-professor-and-human-computing Postdoctoral positions at University of Washington
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collaboration with Dan Eisenberg, Associate Professor of Anthropology. Ideal applicants will have broad interests in the evolutionary biology of living humans and/or non-human primates. Job duties will be adapted
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. The successful candidate will be a member of a highly interdisciplinary team including oncologists, biologists, engineers, and imaging scientists. The candidate will develop computational models of human disease
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, and natural beauty. The Department of Biomedical Informatics and Medical Education provides training, research, and service in education and informatics across the breadth of health sciences and health
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will work under the supervision of and in collaboration with Dan Eisenberg, Associate Professor of Anthropology. Ideal applicants will have broad interests in the evolutionary biology of living humans
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Professor Ben Williams on software development for the Roman Space Telescope and help in the development and testing of the definitive crowded field photometry routine for the Roman Space Telescope. This work
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level. The position requires working collaboratively with a team of experimental and computational biologists to integrate genetic and genomic data with mathematical modeling to better understand
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is within the Department of Radiology, which currently ranks the third-highest NIH-funded among the Radiology Departments in the US. The position will work under Dr. Ganesh Chand, Assistant Professor
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Position Overview School / Campus / College: School of Medicine Organization: Biomedical Informatics and Medical Education Title: Postdoctoral Scholar, Luo Lab - Biomedical and Health Informatics
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At-Risk U.S. Communities." The postdoc will work closely with communities in flood-prone regions of the Midwest and Mississippi Delta to develop tools to predict health risks from flooding and assist local
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Science 371:1154). The position will involve utilizing human specimens, cell culture models (epithelial and immune cells) and testing hypothesis in mouse models of the disease. Appropriate training in all