Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
about each Principal InvestigatorRabinowitz, Joshua - Major areas of interest include: Metabolomics, isotope tracing, metabolic flux analysis, quantitative modeling, mass spectrometry imaging, cancer
-
, to study novel renewable energy technologies. The candidates are expected to have a PhD degree in Chemical Engineering or related field, and have experience with optimization (theory, modeling, and tools
-
required) Kinetic modeling proficiency (Chemkin, Cantera), analytical proficiency (sensitivity, rate of production, etc.) Spectroscopic modeling experience preferred (HITRAN/HITEMP) Familiarity with
-
, single molecule biophysics, biomaterials, materials chemistry, fluid mechanics, rheology, and computational modeling. Candidates should apply at https://puwebp.princeton.edu/AcadHire/position/38901 and
-
genome-scale datasets, as well as proved expertise in their curation and analysis using state-of-the-art phylogenetics implementing phylodynamic models. Strong computational skills and programming
-
attention and decision making networks in a behaving animal model together with parallel studies in humans. The project is part of a NIMH Silvio O. Conte Center on the "Cognitive Thalamus". The successful
-
incident angles for benchmarking and validation of theoretical calculations and computational physics and chemistry modeling of important surface processes occurring at plasma-material interfaces in fusion
-
information about the lab, please visit https://mesa-lab.org/. Projects will utilize in vivo mouse models, transcriptomic techniques, and advanced intravital imaging to investigate: 1) How immune cells localize
-
specific experience in Large Language Models (LLMs), and Vision-Language Models (VLMs) Excellent programming skills (Python is required, C# and C++ is desired) Fluency in English Desired qualifications
-
of interest include: Metabolomics, isotope tracing, metabolic flux analysis, quantitative modeling, mass spectrometry imaging, cancer metabolism, small molecule inhibitor discovery, dietary impact on cancer