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Scholar Duration: 2 years Start Date: Flexible (anticipated Fall/Winter 2025) Principal Investigator: Dr. Titilola Falasinnu Position Summary The Division of Immunology and Rheumatology at Stanford
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research projects and over 180 principal investigators pursuing laboratory, clinical, and health services research. The wet lab environment includes several core facilities such as confocal microscopy and
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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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and interpersonal communication skills, and a demonstrated interest in addressing social justice issues through data-driven research. The postdoc will work in partnership with Principal Investigator
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manuscript writing. This program is supported by an NIH National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) T32 training grant. The postdoctoral fellow may work with one of 23 primary mentors, spanning 7 departments
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performance. Mentorship Structure The postdoc will collaborate closely with the lab’s principal investigator Ellen Vitercik, PhD students, postdocs, and external collaborators on multiple research projects
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(Columbia Business School), and the lab research principal Antonio Coppola (Stanford GSB), and co-authors on academic papers, PhD students, and predoctoral fellows. The fellow will also interact and
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principals to problem solve work. ● Ability to maintain detailed records of experiments and outcomes. ● Ability to quickly learn and master computer programs, databases, and scientific applications
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Masters in Epidemiology and Clinical Research for those who would benefit from additional training in clinical research. Our training program achieves the following specific objectives: Recruit and train
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epidemiology primary mentor. Opportunities for didactic training in epidemiology and research methodology. Access to patients and data from local and national leading studies. Clinical exposure through