20 post-doc-computer-graphics Postdoctoral research jobs at Virginia Tech in United States
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jurisdictions utilizing land use-value assessment estimates. Duties include, but are not limited to: development of computational methods, maintenance of current models and data sets, identifying and testing
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Job Description We invite applications for a postdoctoral associate in theoretical Quantum Information Science in the Computer Science Department of Virginia Tech at the Innovation Campus in
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perceived by both consumers and cider-makers. The post-doc will have their primary home in the Whitehead Lab (speciesinteractions.com) with extensive collaboration and co-mentorship from the Igwe Lab
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on their research and innovation campus. Required Qualifications - PhD and/or MD in Computational Biology, Bioinformatics, Genomics, Biology, Data Science, Computer science or other related fields. PhD must be
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engineering, computer science, and any related fields, or MD with the equivalent level of training and lab experience. • PhD must be awarded no more than four years prior to the effective date of appointment
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A postdoctoral associate position in the area of organoid design and engineering is available in the Department of Chemical Engineering, Virginia Tech (Blacksburg, VA, USA). The post-doctoral
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Job Description The Department of Computer Science, the Department of Electrical and Computing Engineering, and the Innovation Campus at Virginia Tech will be jointly hosting a Postdoctoral
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, materials, virology, computational biology, science communication, community engagement, and ethics. Candidates should demonstrate all relevant qualifications (see required and preferred qualifications below
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Construction Engineering, Civil Engineering, Mechanical Engineering, Computer Science, Robotics, or a related field. Ph.D. in relevant engineering degree. PhD must be awarded no more than four years prior
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and optimization of measurement-based quantum computing protocols for quantum simulation of quantum many-body models. Preference will be given to candidates familiar with the stabilizer formalism and