127 phd-rehabilitation-engineering-computer-science Postdoctoral positions at Stanford University
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Postdoctoral Fellow position in the area of peptide chemistry or radiochemistry is available immediately in the Molecular Imaging Program at Stanford (MIPS), Stanford University School of Medicine
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project with our cornea and chemical engineering department to better understand corneal neurotization and improved techniques to treat neurotrophic keratopathy and techniques to deliver growth factors and
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: Candidate must have a strong quantitative background, with a PhD in computational biology, bioinformatics or related field including bioengineering, computer science, statistics, or mathematics. Strong
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stakeholders and objectives. Required Qualifications: Applicants must have received a PhD from an accredited university before the appointment start date. Demonstrates excellent written and verbal communication
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, minimal residual disease (MRD) detection, and the multi-omic characterization of various cancer types. Required Qualifications: PhD in related fields such as computational biology, cancer biology, and
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from individuals from a broad diversity of PhD-granting institutions, backgrounds, and life experiences. The postdoctoral research scholar program provides time for scholars to pursue their own research
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a PhD in the field of molecular and cellular cancer biology, relevant publications, curiosity for science and innovative thinking, and high fluency in English. Experience with mammalian cell culture
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lab in Stanford’s Psychiatry Department, led by Neir Eshel, MD, PhD. We are looking to hire curious and ambitious postdocs to join our team. Lab projects focus on the neural circuitry of reward-seeking
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Studies Required Qualifications: PhD, MD or MD,PhD in Immunology, Cell Biology or a related field Required Application Materials: Letter of interest CV including publications and names of references
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. Prevalent TCR clones will undergo reverse engineering to deduce the peptide bound, and this information used to generate MHC tetramers to study the induction of these clones during the anti-tumor response