83 channel-coding-electrical-engineering Postdoctoral research jobs at University of Washington
Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Position Overview School / Campus / College: College of Engineering Organization: Bioengineering (COE) Title: Postdoctoral Scholar - Bioengineering Position Details Position Description
-
variety of experimental data, utilize different model structures/modeling techniques, are often closed source or coded in proprietary software packages with poor interoperability, and process experimental
-
, functional genomics, and mouse engineering approaches to understand how cancer cells communicate with their neighbors, or the stromal cells, in the metastatic cascade. Our lab also applies biostatistics
-
learn advanced instrumentation, 3D data analysis, and AI methods in close collaboration with engineers and physicists. We work closely with lab members to develop the skills, confidence, and creativity
-
Position Summary The Meers Lab is seeking out a Postdoctoral Researcher to lead projects that advance single-cell and single-molecule epigenome profiling technology development in service
-
. Participate in grant-funded research and help identify new funding opportunities aligned with lab objectives. Contribute to the development of new collaborations and technology integration for the Spatial
-
the advancement of women faculty in science, engineering, and math (see http://advance.washington.edu/ ). Qualifications University of Washington postdoctoral scholar appointments are for a temporary, defined
-
, 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
-
repository and computer servers. Run existing PET/MR brain image processing pipelines on the computer servers, produce the results, and communicate with the group members. Write computer codes for the above
-
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