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The Empirical Study of Conflict (ESOC) Project at the School of Public and International Affairs seeks a Post-Doctoral Research Associate to provide support to the university's Climate Change
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://pritykinlab.princeton.edu) develops computational methods for design and analysis of high-throughput functional genomic assays and perturbations, with a focus on multi-modal single-cell, spatial and genome editing
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Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering at Princeton University. The position is in the broad area of renewable energy systems synthesis, analysis, and optimization. The goal of the project is to
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, analysis, and optimization. The goal of the project is to develop methods for the synthesis and analysis of systems producing renewable fuels and chemicals; and use these methods, in collaboration with other
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following areas: alternative cements (e.g., chemistry of calcium silicate and carbonate cements), physics of diffusion and carbonation, early-stage rheological characteristics, life cycle analysis, and design
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bias and inequality. The Postdoctoral Research Associate will work with Dr. Stacey Sinclair on an on-going research project examining how the framing of diversity efforts impacts support for and
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. Major project goals will include: inferring the most comprehensive squamate evolutionary tree to date; its integration with fossil data to produce accurate divergence time estimation for all major groups
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technologies. The Pritykin lab (http://pritykinlab.princeton.edu ) develops computational methods for design and analysis of high-throughput functional genomic assays and perturbations, with a focus on multi
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focuses on using optogenetics and metabolic engineering for engineering microorganisms for bioproduction. The main responsibilities of the Postdoctoral Research Associate are to lead the design and
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to work on an NIH-funded multi-lab collaborative project studying the neurocomputational basis of reinforcement learning in rodents. The project, in collaboration with the Berke and Frank labs at UCSF