-
, and have a mandate by the NIH to inform new therapies for this difficult-to-treat disease. Focus is on understanding how corrupt coding and non-coding (“dark genome”) genes that are part of
-
. or equivalent doctorate (e.g. Sc.D., M.D., D.V.M.) in medical physics, biomedical engineering, electrical engineering, or computer science. Candidates with non-US degrees may be required to provide proof
-
Quinn Ostrom (Assistant Professor of Neurosurgery and Population Health Sciences) and Anoop Patel (Associate Professor of Neurosurgery, Biomedical Engineering, and Pathology. The Ostrom lab is focused
-
engineering, physics or a related field or equivalent doctorate (e.g. Sc.D., M.D., D.V.M.). Candidates with non-US degrees may be required to provide proof of degree equivalency. Preferred Qualifications
-
parameter estimation and uncertainty quantification. Work collaboratively with experimentalists and data scientists. Prepare code, figures, and documentation for publications and presentations. Minimum
-
Asokan lab (www.asokanlab.org) is affiliated with the Duke Department of Surgery, Molecular Genetics & Microbiology & Biomedical Engineering and is focused on the development and evaluation of novel gene
-
, Duke University) Dr. John Hickey (Biomedical Engineering, Duke University) Dr. Jessica Conway (Mathematics & Biology, Penn State University) Dr. Elliott SoRelle (Microbiology & Immunology, University
-
goals, and an expected starting date. Additionally, please submit a current CV and that name of three references. Duke is an Affirmative Action/Equal Opportunity Employer committed to providing employment