100 parallel-and-distributed-computing-phd Fellowship positions at Harvard University in United States
Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
especially encourage candidates with proven experience in applying computational and experimental methods to social scientific questions – including aptitude in working with large-scale datasets and text
-
scholars who have recently completed their PhD in economics, business, psychology, public policy, political science, environmental science, statistics, or related fields, and whose research interests include
-
Degeneration Research grant recipient, Yong-Su Kwon, PhD Our Funding Philosophy It is our firm belief that having the courage to invest in innovative ideas will lead to revolutionary therapies. BrightFocus
-
The L’Oréal USA For Women in Science program awards five women postdoctoral scientists annually with grants for their contributions in Science, Technology, Engineering and Math (STEM) fields and
-
computational approaches. See our lab web page (https://projects.iq.harvard.edu/gaudetlab ) for more information about our publications and research interests. Basic Qualifications Candidate must hold a PhD in
-
for candidates interested in developmental, stem cell, neuro, computational biology, genetics or genomics. Basic Qualifications The candidate should have a PhD or plan to defend their PhD in the coming year
-
Qualifications The Fellowship is meant for recent postdoctoral scholars who have completed their PhD studies in the last five years. For this year’s application cycle, applicants must have obtained their PhD
-
/Watabe-Uchida laboratory at Harvard University to study the neural mechanism of decision-making. We seek an individual from a various background with an interest in animal behavior, computation in
-
lab group meeting (journal readings, in progress research talks, visiting speakers), and helping affiliated PhD and undergraduate students gain access to and work with the Cebu data. The Postdoc will
-
)colonial Indigenous settings in the USA. Responsibilities Under the supervision of Prof. Joseph Gone, Faculty Director of the Harvard University Native American Program, and in collaboration with regional