85 phd-in-cloud-computing Postdoctoral positions at Conservatorio di Musica "Santa Cecilia"
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decisions are made under pressure, and how technology can support (rather than hinder) patient care. The postdoctoral scholar will use modern data science tools and cloud computing to analyze high-dimensional
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genomics and single-cell spatial transcriptomics, participate in T cell-targeted therapy development, hone their computational, leadership, communication, and funding acquisition skills, and join the vibrant
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for Human and Planetary Health (HPH) (link is external) and Project Unleaded (link is external) for an exciting postdoctoral fellowship that contributes to a high-impact global program with a mission to
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Posted on Mon, 08/04/2025 - 11:14 Important Info Deprecated / Faculty Sponsor (Last, First Name): Wolak, Frank Stanford Departments and Centers: FSI Program on Energy and Sustainable Development
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. She is also a faculty member in the Biophysics Program and a Faculty Fellow of the Sarafan ChEM-H (Chemistry, Engineering and Medicine for Human Health) Institute. Cegelski’s PhD in Chemistry and
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Framework Programme? Other EU programme Is the Job related to staff position within a Research Infrastructure? No Offer Description Fondo IPCEI ME/CT – Microelectronics - Continuation ID: IPCEI-M2 0000006
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model APIs, cloud computing environments, and R for additional statistical analysis. For decision support prototype development and evaluation, web-based user interface design, human-computer interaction
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scientists. Candidates with experience in prototyping, optical instrumentation, image processing, or translational device development are particularly encouraged to apply. Required Qualifications: PhD in
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. Required Qualifications: PhD in statistics, economics, computer science, operations research, or related data science fields Strong data science skills, including experience working with large, complex data
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embryos This Human Frontier Science Program (HFSP) (link is external) funded project is in collaboration with the labs of Hervé Turlier (CIRB-CNRS) and Chema Martin (Queen Mary University of London). We