Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Regular/Temporary Regular Job Code 9546 Employee Class Acad Prof and Admin Add to My Favorite Jobs Email this Job About the Job 15% Design experiments related to influenza and/or innate immunity 55% Execute
-
on application materials. Required Qualifications: • PhD in Immunology, Cell Biology, or related biomedical sciences • In-depth scientific expertise in cell death, macrophage biology, and fibrotic disease
-
position for a postdoctoral associate. The focus of the lab is to investigate the mechanisms regulating reproductive function in avian species in health and disease. Research projects include investigating
-
the maturation of engrafted PSC-derived myogenic progenitors.. 35% Collaborate with other laboratory scientists and outside scientific partners in the design, implementation, and analysis of experiments. As
-
needed.(10%) 5) Perform miscellaneous office duties as assigned by the PI including, but not limited to, the organization and coordination of meetings and projects. (10%) 6) Maintain frequent communication
-
on application materials. Required Qualifications: • PhD in Immunology, Molecular Biology, or a closely related biomedical field • Strong foundation in cellular and molecular immunology, with demonstrated
-
students on data analysis and detector projects. 40% Instruction of introductory physics lecture section 25% Core reconstruction and simulation software and computing development 15% Construction
-
an independent research project and lead a team of undergraduate/postgraduate researchers. Candidates should be able to manipulate and engineer yeast, using classical yeast genetics and modern CRISPR-cas9
-
):4237. You will be expected to collaborate with other laboratory scientists and outside scientific partners in the design, implementation, and analysis of experiments. As required, you will be expected
-
Code 9546 Employee Class Acad Prof and Admin Add to My Favorite Jobs Email this Job About the Job About the Job: 30% Lead research projects pertaining to development of large animal models of disease