42 image-segmentation Postdoctoral positions at Conservatorio di Musica "Santa Cecilia"
Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
scholars appointed through the Office of Postdoctoral Affairs. The FY25 minimum is $76,383. We are seeking a highly motivated postdoctoral scholar to join our translational imaging laboratory at Stanford
-
in immunology and interest in translational research. The successful candidate will join the Section of Surgical Sciences in the Division of General Surgery, and work on a project aimed to understand
-
Stanford University required minimum for all postdoctoral scholars appointed through the Office of Postdoctoral Affairs. The FY25 minimum is $76,383. Evolution of asymmetric cell division in spiralian
-
within the Stanford Division of Neonatology We are looking for a scholar with training and experience in immunology, molecular or developmental biology or related fields, interested to pursue a
-
documentation) can be submitted via the Apply button at the top of the page. For employees of the University or contingent workers, please login into your Workday account and navigate to the Career icon on your
-
(link is external) (CARE), under the Division for Research and Education in Academic Medicine (link is external) (DREAM), is the only medical center among top US universities devoted to advancing
-
and aggression, using optogenetics, in vivo imaging, electrophysiology, and sophisticated machine learning/artificial intelligence analyses of mouse behavior. All projects have translational components
-
the Laboratory can be found at https://www.nivs-lab.org/ (link is external) . Required Qualifications: Ph.D. in Biomedical Imaging, Neurobiology, Bioengineering, Medical Physics, or related areas Be
-
the United States as well as clinical imaging and testing data from Stanford. Project themes will include developing models using EHR data to predict outcomes in ophthalmology and glaucoma, as well as investigating
-
whole-body cancer detection. We are interested in both technical development and clinical translation pipelines, leveraging resources at the Lucas Center for Imaging, synergies across the clinical MRI