Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
. The postdoctoral associate will work in collaboration with supervisors and other scientists to study how global biospheres alter planetary processes in ways that are remotely detectable. This research will involve
-
collaboration with supervisors and other scientists to study how global biospheres alter planetary processes in ways that are remotely detectable. This research will involve: Using biogeochemical evolutionary
-
. The postdoctoral associate will work in collaboration with supervisors and other scientists to study how global biospheres alter planetary processes in ways that are remotely detectable. This research will involve
-
would have the opportunity to work with colleagues working on animal models of streptococcal sepsis and IE. This project is a multi-PI collaborative project with Paul Sullam (Microbiologist at UCSF
-
Position Summary Dr. Amargant-Riera’s research laboratory focuses on understanding the mechanisms that define oocyte quality. The lab uses mouse models and human samples to investigate
-
, multimodal transportation systems, network modeling, etc. Duties will include conducting original research, disseminating research findings, supervising undergraduate research students, managing projects
-
collaboration that aims to refine our understanding of the controls on ocean carbon cycling and ecosystem resilience with integrated observations and modeling. The lab houses a state of the art mass spectrometry
-
colleagues working on animal models of streptococcal sepsis and IE. This project is a multi-PI collaborative project with Paul Sullam (Microbiologist at UCSF) and Jose Lopez (Hematologist at Bloodworks
-
of mutual interest such as, but not limited to, automatic machine learning model selection and automatically explaining machine learning classification / prediction results. The Luo lab is in UW Medicine’s
-
, 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