40 computer-science-postdoc Postdoctoral positions at University of Washington in United-States
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periodontics, orthodontics, and oral medicine. OHS also sponsors the School of Dentistry’s only PhD program as well as the combined DDS-PhD program and the Masters of Science program for Dental Hygiene. Our
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collaboration with Dan Eisenberg, Associate Professor of Anthropology. Ideal applicants will have broad interests in the evolutionary biology of living humans and/or non-human primates. Job duties will be adapted
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. of Earth and Space Sciences, which has four broad research areas: the solid earth, surface processes, geobiology, and space/planetary sciences. The group involved in the postdoc project are also part of
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modeling team, the UW Salish Sea Modeling Center, NOAA Northwest Fisheries Science Center, PNNL, and CSIRO Australia. The postdoc will also interface with the Future Scenarios project at the Puget Sound
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the Required Qualifications section. Work Experience: No additional work experience beyond what is stated in the Required Qualifications section. Skills: Collaboration, Computational Biology, Data Analysis, Data
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. Computational and bioinformatic skills. Experience in microscopy. Generation and analysis of mouse models. Handling of human samples. Molecular biology skills including CRISPR, cloning and qPCR. In vitro cell
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-of-use water filter during use. Methods are expected to use LC-MS/MS and GC-MS workflow. These methods would be applied for laboratory testing and in a pilot testing program. Job Description Primary Duties
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, Bioinformatics, Molecular Biology, Developmental Biology, Computational Biology, etc.). Exceptional skills in molecular biology, genomics, human cell culture, and bioinformatics. Preferred Qualifications Education
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to lead impactful research at the interface of aging biology, neurodegeneration, and spatial omics. The successful candidate will contribute to high-profile projects investigating the cellular and molecular
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(including Crohn’s disease and ulcerative colitis) using molecular and cell biology, multi-omics technologies, murine models, and human tissues. We currently have three major focuses: 1) Innate lymphoid cells