Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
. Qualifications Required Qualifications: Completed PhD in biomedical engineering, electrical engineering, physics, or a medical imaging related field. Experience with developing advanced pulse sequences
-
exclusion criteria apply. For more information, please visit the University of Washington Labor Relations website . Required Qualifications: Completed PhD in biomedical engineering, electrical engineering
-
engineering and other related fields. Candidates must have experience with transducer and catheter fabrication from raw materials including soldering, irrigation, air-backing, sealing, and epoxy. Electronic and
-
conditions, and brain tissue microstructure and functioning. The successful candidate will be working within a multi-disciplinary team of MRI physicists, computer scientists, radiologists, neuroscientists, and
-
research participants. With this research, we have a unique opportunity to address the large unmet need of treatment-resistant disorders of brain function. We have applied the technology to patients with
-
Qualifications: PhD in Environmental Engineering, Environmental Chemistry, Analytical Chemistry, Environmental Science, and/or other aligned discipline. Operation and optimization of LCMS and/or GCMS
-
, educators, and software engineers from I-LABS who want to bring the best methods of bilingual language teaching to early education classrooms. For this donor-funded research, the primary responsibilities
-
and prevent preterm birth. The lab uses innovative and cutting edge experimentation and relies heavily on bioinformatics and biomechanical systems engineering. Job Description Primary Duties
-
Position Summary Postdoctoral Research position open in the O’Brien Lab (Department of Biomedical Engineering, Danforth and Medical Campus). Dr. Christine O’Brien invites applicants to join her
-
, interdisciplinary collaboration, applied science that informs management and policy, and travel to Europe to work with project partners. Key responsibilities include: Coordinating and leading meetings with research