79 civil-engineering-soil-structure-interaction Postdoctoral positions at University of Washington
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resolution. The studies will include using cell culture and organoid models to provide mechanistic insight of murine models of lung injury. We seek candidates with experience in murine tissue collection, cell
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. Qualifications Required Qualifications: Completed PhD in biomedical engineering, electrical engineering, physics, or a medical imaging related field. Experience with developing advanced pulse sequences
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are looking for a postdoctoral researcher with physics or engineering expertise who will design and operate a 3D super-resolution ultrasound system, write control software, build computational imaging pipelines
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needed to explore the intersection of biology, technology, and AI. All Marti Lab members receive mentoring in writing, speaking, and career planning, and help build a culture based on kindness, curiosity
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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
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consortium involvement in the Undiagnosed Diseases Network, Genomic Information Commons, and the Impact of Genomic Variation on Function. We are seeking a skill set in cell culture experiments, including
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exclusion criteria apply. For more information, please visit the University of Washington Labor Relations website . Required Qualifications: Completed PhD in biomedical engineering, electrical engineering
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or more of the following areas: cell biology, molecular biology, biochemistry, genetics or RNA biology. Hands-on experience in mammalian cell culture, Northern and Western blotting, ELISA, qPCR, RNA/DNA
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signaling pathways that promote lung injury resolution. The studies will include using cell culture and organoid models to provide mechanistic insight of murine models of lung injury. We seek candidates with
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, single-cell multiomics, tissue engineering, and animal models. Our current research primarily focuses on four key areas: 1) Developing robust, chemically defined differentiation protocols to generate