134 post-doc-image-processing Postdoctoral research jobs at University of Washington in United-States
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Position Summary The Integrated Biomedical Imaging Laboratory is seeking a Postdoctoral Research Associate interested in developing novel hybrid noninvasive imaging systems for studying the pregnant
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processing of social information in patients with psychiatric conditions remain largely unclear. We use a suite of cutting-edge techniques, including in vivo multi-photon imaging, fiber photometry, and custom
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, such as spatial transcriptomics, proteomics, and multiplexed imaging, to analyze brain tissue. Lead data analysis and interpretation, integrating multi-omic and imaging datasets to identify cellular and
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, cloning, molecular biology techniques, stable cell line generation, RT-PCR, flow cytometry with intracellular staining, cell sorting, mouse tissue collection/processing (blood, lung, and bone marrow
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manner consistent with our core mission and guiding principles. Preferred Qualifications Education: No additional education unless stated elsewhere in the job posting. Certifications: No additional
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the job posting. Certifications: No additional certification unless stated elsewhere in the job posting. Work Experience: No additional work experience unless stated elsewhere in the job posting. Skills
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of three references via e-mail to Dr. Yoon-A Kang (yoonakang@wustl.edu ). Kang Lab Department of Medicine, Hematology division WashU in St. Louis Email: yoonakang@wustl.edu https://thekanglab.org https
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, 2025. Applications received by November 30, 2025 will receive full consideration. Inquiries should be directed to: Martin Savage mjs5@uw.edu. This posting will remain open until filled. Equal
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available resources will be highly beneficial. Preferred Qualifications Education: No additional education unless stated elsewhere in the job posting. Certifications: No additional certification unless stated
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Position Summary The Boon lab is looking for an enthusiastic Post-doctoral fellow to support our team studying cellular immune responses to influenza virus and SARS-CoV-2 in mouse and hamster models