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University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill | Chapel Hill, North Carolina | United States | 26 days ago
recognized for its research in musculoskeletal health, including biomechanics, tissue engineering, and orthobiologics. The Academic Support Coordinator for the Department of Orthopaedics provides comprehensive
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PhD position at The Karolinska Institute, Sweden (ENDOTRAIN) (DC2) PhD position available in: Omics in patients with primary adrenal insufficiency (DC2) Apply for this job See advertisement PhD
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of multi-modal Foundation Models that integrate single-cell omics with spatiotemporal information. The second position will address the development of a virtual tissue model, exploiting spatial
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experience in one or more of the relevant fields (e.g., stem cell biology, developmental biology, tissue engineering, biomedical engineering, or related disciplines). Proven expertise in pluripotent stem cell
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processing. The candidate should have an MSc degree in Applied Physics, Electrical Engineering, or the equivalent. The PhD position is firmly imbedded in a physics environment, but the candidate strongly
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Infrastructure? No Offer Description Work group: IBG-4 - Bioinformatik Area of research: PHD Thesis Job description: Your Job: Develop methods and workflows to construct robust co-regulation networks from large
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Job Purpose To make a leading contribution to an exciting new UKRI funded project to develop ‘Ultrasound-Guided Activation and Imaging of Engineered Bacteria for Stroma Reprogramming’, working with
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efficiency. Track grants, manuscripts, invited talks, etc., as metrics of research success. Oversee the coordination of shared departmental research resources, including tissue biobanks, data analysis support
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interdisciplinary lab group investigating tendon injury and healing. Current projects within the lab span from human subjects research to the study of ex vivo tissues and preclinical models. This position is
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(Biospectroscopy Department): PhD Candidate (m/f/d) The doctoral research project investigates the role of tissue-resident and inflammation-recruited macrophage subpopulations in their acute response to reperfusion