24 postdoc-computational-biomedical-engineering Postdoctoral positions at Harvard University
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The Postdoctoral Diversity Enrichment Program (PDEP) provides $60,000 over three years to support the career development activities and success of underrepresented postdoctoral fellows in a degree
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Details Title Postdoctoral Positions in High-Energy Theory at Harvard University School Faculty of Arts and Sciences Department/Area Physics Position Description Postdoctoral Positions in High-Energy Theory at Harvard University Applicants are invited for research positions in high-energy theory...
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departures from biomedical research workforce at this critical juncture. This supplement program is intended to ensure continuity of research among recipients of mentored career development (K) awards by
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, engineering, computer science, and machine learning. The postdoctoral fellow will assume scientific leadership for one observatory site and will: Lead site commissioning, including performance verification and
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For the purposes of this program, physician-scientists include individuals with an MD, DO, DDS/DMD, DVM/VMD, or nurses with research doctoral degrees who devote the majority of their time to biomedical research
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discipline such as biology (all subfields), environmental science, computer science, or mechanical engineering, and must be comfortable handling insects and conducting field work at night. Additional
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complex survival strategies. We hope to deeply understand how bacteria react and respond to stress and use this knowledge to engineer useful functions in bacteria. We invite applications from postdoctoral
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, 120-128. Basic Qualifications A PhD (or equivalent), or near completion, in a relevant field such as chemistry, physics, materials science, or engineering (chemical, electrical, or mechanical
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inaccessible regimes. Work in the lab combines optics, protein engineering, chemistry, electrophysiology, simulation, and theory. We work at the levels of individual molecules, single cells, and whole
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development of researchers who are transitioning from training environments in the physical, mathematical, computational sciences and/or engineering into postdoctoral work in the biological sciences, and who