115 optimization-nonlinear-functions Postdoctoral positions at University of Washington
Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
experience. The above statements are intended to describe the general nature and level of work performed by people assigned to this classification. They are not intended to be construed as an exhaustive list
-
collaborative open-lab space in the Couch Biomedical Research Building. This appointment is considered a training-focused, transitional role toward an independent academic, industrial, or research career. As a
-
their reproducibility, and facilitating their clinical translation across various body regions and disease types. The work will primarily utilize Philips 3T and 1.5T scanners as the main platform, while with additional
-
/year, with an initial term appointment of one year, with the possibility of renewal subject to satisfactory performance and availability of funding for up to three years. The salary for this position
-
. The above statements are intended to describe the general nature and level of work performed by people assigned to this classification. They are not intended to be construed as an exhaustive list of all job
-
full-time (12-month service period), with an initial appointment for one year, and renewal is possible pending satisfactory performance. The base salary range for this position will be $5,667.00
-
agreement and performance. Postdoctoral scholars are represented by UAW 4121 and are subject to the collective bargainingagreement, unless agreed exclusion criteria apply. For more information, please visit
-
Position Description The Department of Earth and Spaces Sciences at the University of Washington seeks a Postdoctoral Scholar to work on numerical simulations and data analysis to inform the search for life
-
of neuronal loss to better understand why neurons die or axons are damaged to ultimately establish new strategies for the preservation or restoration of neural tissue. We use multiple approaches, but focus
-
, functional genomics, and mouse engineering approaches to understand how cancer cells communicate with their neighbors, or the stromal cells, in the metastatic cascade. Our lab also applies biostatistics