40 web-programmer-developer-"U.S"-"U.S" research jobs at Medical College of Wisconsin
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IRB regulatory tasks, data collection and entry, working with clinic and community sites, developing reports, filing, logging, working with trainees, problem-solving, and brainstorming. Primary
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Position Description: Summary Function as Program Assistant (non-participant facing) within CAPS. Broad job duties include supporting research units within a research program in CAPS focused
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IRB regulatory tasks, data collection and entry, working with clinic and community sites, developing reports, filing, logging, performing basic statistical analyses under guidance, working with trainees
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IRB regulatory tasks, data collection and entry, working with clinic and community sites, developing reports, filing, logging, performing basic statistical analyses under guidance, working with trainees
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IRB regulatory tasks, data collection and entry, working with clinic and community sites, developing reports, filing, logging, performing basic statistical analyses under guidance, working with trainees
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Maintain Pediatric Training Program(s) timeline including tracking deadlines for program deliverables. In collaboration with Pediatric Medical Education Leadership team, develop and manage the program budget
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development. Establish an individual development plan (IDP) that incorporates equally the postdoc's career and training goals and the mentor's research goals. Pursue basic, or translational projects so long as
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the effects of high-salt diets on kidney metabolism, energy production, and oxygen utilization in both normal and salt-sensitive hypertension. Fellows will create and follow an individualized development plan
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. Investigate signaling pathways associated with cancer driving mutants. Perform xenograft experiments. Generate and analyze human and microbial genomic sequencing data from tumor DNA and RNA. Plan, design and
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involving signaling between nociceptors and non-neuronal cells in models of bladder dysfunction, as well as work closely with mechanical, electrical, and biological engineers to develop tools to study and