127 phd-in-integrated-circuit-design Postdoctoral positions at University of Washington
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Position Overview School / Campus / College: School of Medicine Organization: Biochemistry Title: Postdoctoral Scholar - Department of Biochemistry - Baker Lab, Institute for Protein Design Position
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Position Overview School / Campus / College: School of Medicine Organization: Biochemistry Title: Postdoctoral Scholar - Department of Biochemistry - King Lab, Institute for Protein Design Position
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dynamics of fear circuits in response to potential danger and actual attacks by animate entities. The position offers opportunities for close collaboration within a vibrant neuroscience community at UW
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the neural dynamics of fear circuits in response to potential danger and actual attacks by animate entities. The position offers opportunities for close collaboration within a vibrant neuroscience community at
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Position Summary This position will focus on integrating high-resolution field monitoring, remote sensing, and statistical and numerical modeling approaches to improve predictive flood hazard
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Radiotheranostics Translation Center (PRTC), WashU Medicine in St. Louis, Missouri, in the laboratory of Dr. Kooresh Shoghi. The postdoctoral candidate will be an integral part of an interdisciplinary translational
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focuses on studying the multifaceted functions of pattern recognition receptors (PRRs). The major topics include: 1. Role of PRRs in innate immune sensing during infection; and 2. Role of PRRs in modulating
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, long-term visiting scientists and participants of strategic-selected community-driven workshops. It will help guide the basic research and co-design efforts to evolve simulations from present-day NISQ
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. Another primary focus is the cross-modal integration of Alzheimer’s disease genomics with brain-imaging derived phenotypes to elucidate how genetics contributes to disease heterogeneity. Overall
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, to define novel biomarkers, and to identify novel therapeutical targets. We have pioneered in the integration of genetics with omic data to identify proteomic signatures and develop novel predictive models