80 parallel-computing-numerical-methods Fellowship positions at University of British Columbia in Canada
Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Additional experiences in computational analysis and brain development would be assets Consequence of Error: The successful applicant is expected to exercise a considerable amount of judgment, responsibility
-
in an inter-disciplinary research environment Additional experiences in computational analysis and brain development would be assets Consequence of Error: The successful applicant is expected
-
collaboration with laboratories computational biologists. Lead independent research projects and contribute to collaborative efforts within the lab. Present findings in manuscripts, conferences, and funding
-
with Dr. Kristen Haase, the successful candidate will have a background in qualitative and quantitative research methods and a strong commitment to applied research that influences policy, practice, and
-
International Fellowships have been in existence since 1917. The program provides support for women pursuing full-time graduate or postdoctoral study in the United States to women who are not U.S
-
, enabled through digital health technologies in Africa (Kenya, Uganda + more). The Trainee will be working on a program with over 15+ years (Smart Discharges Child, Smart Discharges Mom&Baby, Smart Triage
-
scope to experimentally validate their computational findings. This is a full-time, grant funded position within the Centre for Molecular Medicine and Therapeutics, at the University of British Columbia
-
leading edge research into improved substance use care across BC. To this end, the BCCSU develops evidence-based training curricula, program standards, and practice guidelines while networking regional
-
, StrokeCog can leverage CANTRAIN’s online tools, learning-management systems, training programs and its college of mentors. Applicants apply to the StrokeCog fellowship program through the CANTRAIN portal
-
aim of this programme is to facilitate and strengthen collaboration with academic researchers in scientific fields that are priorities for France and Canada, as defined at the first Joint Committee