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laboratory of Stephen Skirboll, MD and Albert Wong, MD, in the Department of Neurosurgery at Stanford University School of Medicine and the VA Palo Alto. We are interested in developing immunotherapies
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The Stanford Abdominal Diffusion Group is seeking thoughtful, motivated and collaborative postdoctoral fellows to join a growing team developing motion-robust multi-shot DWI methods for liver, pancreatic, and
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for (1) engineering BPAN genetic variants into cell lines; (2) developing cellular assays including of autophagy function and cellular survival; (3) working with the Stanford high throughput drug screening
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biochemistry and biophysics directed at the discovery and development of new antibacterial therapeutics targeting difficult-to-treat bacteria. More broadly and coupled to drug discovery, we define the molecular
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—to address critical sustainability and climate resilience challenges. Your primary focus will be on developing, refining, and deploying innovative genetic engineering tools for CRISPR-Cas9 delivery. Key
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, with special emphasis on autism, depression, and addiction. There are ample opportunities for career development and clinical exposure based on candidate interest. Required Qualifications: The ideal
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cell fate decisions, particularly during early neural development or during the epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT) in cancer. Our recent work reveals that coding sequences (CDS) and their cognate
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Substitution in the Blind; Ocular Structures and Physiology; MR Engineering and Methods Development for the Visual System. MRI experiments will mainly be conducted at research centers at the Stanford campus and
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to create “A Spatial Transcriptomic Atlas of Embryo-Endometrial Crosstalk During Implantation and Human Embryo Development”. This position is funded by a new collaborative grant between the laboratories of Dr
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communicate by flexibly reasoning about what other agents know and want. Recently, we have been exploring how this framework of inferential social learning can be applied to develop socially intelligent