Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
The University of Virginia, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, is seeking applicants for a post-doctoral associate to work in the Computational Biomedical Imaging Group
-
certification required. PHYSICAL DEMANDS Job requires standing for prolonged periods, frequently bending/stooping, reaching (overhead, extensive, and repetitive); Repetitive motion: computer keyboard. Proficient
-
microscopy, electron microscopy, primary cell or tissue culture, molecular biology, protein biochemistry, proteomics. Proficiency with image analysis software (e.g. Image J, photoshop and Imaris), and
-
appendage closures. Both units are proud to be part of the nationally ranked UVA Children’s Pediatric Cardiology & Heart Surgery program. Responsible for performing specialized technologist roles within
-
Qualifications Bachelor’s degree in Computer Science, MIS, Computer Engineering, or a related field. At least three years of relevant experience. (Relevant experience may substitute for a degree.) Preferred
-
, Psychology, Life Science, Molecular Biology, and similar. Strong computer and spreadsheet skills, and the ability to carefully analyze large data sets. Experience in animal work (especially rodents
-
their families What You’ll Do Provide well-child exams, sick visits, and developmental screenings Diagnose and treat common pediatric illnesses and conditions Order and interpret labs, imaging, and other
-
(protein characterization), and cell biology (fluorescent imaging). Our ultimate goal is to modulate those stress response pathways in physiological and pathological conditions, potentially leading
-
Education: Bachelor's degree in Computer Science, MIS, Computer Engineering or related discipline Experience: At least one year of experience. Relevant experience may be considered in lieu of a degree
-
laboratory employs state-of-the-art calcium imaging, patch clamp electrophysiology, super resolution imaging, functional assays, radio telemetric blood pressure measurements, and transgenic mouse models