103 computational-geometry-phd Fellowship research jobs at University of British Columbia
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Human Program and UBC’s Biodevice Foundry. Qualifications PhD in immunology, developmental biology (focused on the immune system), immune-engineering, or a related field (obtained within the last 5 years
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The National Research Council of Canada (NRC) Luise and Gerhard Herzberg Postdoctoral Fellowship is awarded every year to a recent PhD graduate who identifies as a woman and who has demonstrated
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development and target discovery challenges. Qualifications: PhD in bioengineering, computational biology, machine learning, systems immunology, or related discipline, obtained within the last 5 years, by
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discovery challenges. Qualifications: PhD in bioengineering, computational biology, machine learning, systems immunology, or related discipline, obtained within the last 5 years, by the time of
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, enabled through digital health technologies in Africa (Kenya, Uganda + more). The Trainee will be working on a program with over 15+ years (Smart Discharges Child, Smart Discharges Mom&Baby, Smart Triage
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The fellow will be responsible for: Building collaborations with our multidisciplinary team (medical physicists, engineers, computer scientists, nuclear medicine physicians) to develop and implement innovative
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the PRODIGY program Requirements: ● a PhD in physical oceanography, or related field, by the time of appointment ● experience working with ocean observations, or a keen willingness to learn; note specific
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imaging QUALIFICATIONS Successful applicants will have: a PhD in medical physics, computer science, biomedical engineering, electrical engineering, applied mathematics, or a related field; or an MD with
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-time Postdoctoral Fellow to join us at the Digital & Sexual Health Initiative (DiSHI; dishiresearch.ca), a program of research led by Dr. Mark Gilbert at the School of Population and Public Health
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at the Digital & Sexual Health Initiative (DiSHI; dishiresearch.ca ), a program of research led by Dr. Mark Gilbert at the School of Population and Public Health, University of British Columbia and the