78 high-performance-quantum-computing Postdoctoral positions at University of Minnesota
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processes to ensure bioburden reduction and then developing robust assays and quality controls to measure and verify the process met its intent. You are expected to perform high level experimental and
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between neuromodulation and fMRI. The postdoc will work on the network level perturbation of neurocircuits using high-definition neuromodulation. This postdoc will lead scientific discovery in developing
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regulation during T cell contraction and resolution of inflammation • Perform high-dimensional flow cytometry for immune phenotyping and apoptosis/efferocytosis analysis • Use molecular and cellular tools (e.g
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, performing, analyzing, and writing up to report for publication behavioral neuroscience experiments addressing questions of decision-making in rodents Qualifications Required Qualifications: PhD in
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for the development of new targeted cancer therapeutic approaches. Research technicians are responsible for performing standard bench-level laboratory experiments in support of scientific research. Responsibilities
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should be open to learning new techniques and have a strong interest in using next-generation sequencing-based techniques to study virus-host interactions. Specifically, Individuals will perform epigenetic
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to: Understand basic principles of brain functioning across development (i.e. figure out how the brain works) Learn about how neuropsychiatric and other brain-based disorders develop and progress over time
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statistical analyses, bioinformatics, command-line programming, and high performance computing clusters. Willingness and ability to occasionally work weekend hours due to study organism life cycles(<5% time
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development. Publish research findings in high-impact peer-reviewed journals and present at scientific conferences. Gain experience writing and submitting grants for institutions such as the National Institutes
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protein function. Maintenance of membrane bilayer integrity and tight control over material transfer across cellular and organellar membranes is central to proper physiological functioning. Dysfunction