45 parallel-processing-bioinformatics Postdoctoral research jobs at Stanford University
Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Posted on Wed, 09/03/2025 - 13:09 Important Info Deprecated / Faculty Sponsor (Last, First Name): Valdez, Tulio Stanford Departments and Centers: Otolaryngology, Head & Neck Surgery Appointment
-
-quality data collection and processing, with opportunities to explore scientific questions at the interface of neuroscience and AI in collaboration with theory and modeling teams. What We Offer A
-
Posted on Mon, 07/07/2025 - 19:04 Important Info Deprecated / Faculty Sponsor (Last, First Name): Hekman, Katherine Stanford Departments and Centers: Surg: Vascular Surgery Postdoc Appointment Term
-
community that spans discovery to clinical implementation. Specific Responsibilities include: experimental design, data acquisition, data processing, statistical computation, methods development, data
-
which promote a pro-inflammatory response. This molecular process plays a significant role in various acute and chronic inflammatory disorders including acute Graft versus Host Disease (GVHD), a common
-
Engineering and a willingness to learn about the technology, economics, and regulatory oversight process of governing the energy sector in North America and Europe. The post-doctoral researcher will work
-
large animal models, lymphatic research, and MRI. The scholar will be supported by MR technologists (MRI studies), plastic surgeons (lymphatic surgery), radiologists (MRI studies and imaging evaluation
-
the labs of Dr. Meagan Mauter and Dr. William Tarpeh. This interdisciplinary position will focus on the development of process modeling techniques for the extraction and purification of critical minerals
-
awareness, are known to be critical. However, the role of other factors – such as differences in visual processing and executive functions (EFs) – are still debated. The overarching goal of this project is to
-
biochemistry and biophysics directed at the discovery and development of new antibacterial therapeutics targeting difficult-to-treat bacteria. More broadly and coupled to drug discovery, we define the molecular