76 phd-in-concrete-and-structural-engineering Postdoctoral research jobs at University of Washington
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Position Overview School / Campus / College: College of Engineering Organization: Bioengineering (COE) Title: Postdoctoral Scholar - Bioengineering Position Details Position Description
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Applicable Driver's License: A driver's license is not required for this position. More About This Job Required Qualifications: The successful applicant will hold, or shortly expects to obtain, a PhD
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Driver's License: A driver's license is not required for this position. More About This Job Required Qualifications: A PhD in Genetics, Bioinformatics, Computer Science, Data Science, Statistical Genomics
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, tumor immunology organotypic in-vitro models, genetically engineered animal models and human tissues from clinical trials. All these approaches are brought to bear on impactful questions in tumor
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(Programming Language), R Programming Driver's License: A driver's license is not required for this position. More About This Job Required Qualifications: PhD in Genomics or a related discipline. Familiarity
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. Participate in grant-funded research and help identify new funding opportunities aligned with lab objectives. Contribute to the development of new collaborations and technology integration for the Spatial
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Qualifications: Experience with regulatory genomics, noncoding variant interpretation, or genome assembly/structural variant detection. At least two first-author publications in peer-reviewed journals. Strong
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Developing models to represent structure in networks using low dimensional manifolds Modeling demographic and health trends in low-resource settings Developing a decision-making framework for policy decisions
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, single-cell multiomics, tissue engineering, and animal models. Our current research primarily focuses on four key areas: 1) Developing robust, chemically defined differentiation protocols to generate
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delivery (e.g., mRNA, siRNA, ASO, lentivirus technology, transient transfection, loss/gain of function experiments), immunocytochemistry, light and confocal microscopy. Prior experience with induced