Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Postdoctoral Researcher to work on projects related to digital holography and optical coherence tomography. Candidates should have a PhD in electrical or biomedical engineering or related disciplines with
-
will contribute to developing and evaluating state-of-the-art methods for predicting mental health outcomes from multi-modal clinical and digital health data. This position offers the opportunity to work
-
, and behavioral measures. · Collect, process, and analyze multimodal datasets, including neural, physiological, and motion-tracking signals. · Develop and refine research protocols and methodologies in
-
quality monitoring, drone surveys, digital twins and ecosystem service modelling to generate estimates of ecosystem functions and services provided by a living shoreline that is being constructed at Marine
-
PhD in a field relevant to cellular and developmental biology, and they will bring technical skills to study areas such as stem cell biology, protein biochemistry, light microscopy, or cell signaling
-
is filled, regardless of where the search committee is at in the review process.) Duke is an Equal Opportunity Employer committed to providing employment opportunity without regard to an individual's
-
the roles of different signaling pathways (e.g. MAPK, AKT, etc) in regulating pro-proliferative vs. pro-hypertrophic cardiac phenotype in vitro and in vivo. You will further explore sex dependency
-
discipline awarded before August 1st, 2026. Applicants with experience in mathematical modeling, dynamical systems, applied PDEs, analysis and simulation of stochastic processes, data calibration, and/or
-
. (Note: Search committee will screen applications as they come in and must continue screening ALL applications until position is filled, regardless of where the search committee is at in the review process
-
chromatin architecture regulates fundamental DNA-templated processes including DNA replication, transcription, and DNA repair. Our research uses the budding yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae as a model system to