96 computer-science-image-processing Postdoctoral positions at Conservatorio di Musica "Santa Cecilia"
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University. The ideal candidate will have a strong background in engineering—biomedical, electrical, or mechanical—with expertise in optics, imaging systems, or device development. Our research focuses
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Post Doctoral Fellow of Ophthalmology and Visual Sciences Posting Number req33901 Employment Type Faculty Faculty Type Research Hiring Department Department of Ophthalmology (409A) Academic Location
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in immunology and interest in translational research. The successful candidate will join the Section of Surgical Sciences in the Division of General Surgery, and work on a project aimed to understand
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information science, and applied social science research. This position is well-suited for someone interested in research design and the application of geographic principles and methods to policy analysis and
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embryos This Human Frontier Science Program (HFSP) (link is external) funded project is in collaboration with the labs of Hervé Turlier (CIRB-CNRS) and Chema Martin (Queen Mary University of London). We
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imaging; cellular and molecular biology studies and assays including for example cell culture and transfections, qRT-PCR, RNA and DNA isolation and preparation, ELISAs, tissue histology and microscopy, and
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opportunity to work on computational research related to one (or more) of the following areas: coastal dynamics (surf-zone to shelf), submesoscale processes, kelp-current interactions, or marine carbon dioxide
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the United States as well as clinical imaging and testing data from Stanford. Project themes will include developing models using EHR data to predict outcomes in ophthalmology and glaucoma, as well as investigating
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Engineering and a willingness to learn about the technology, economics, and regulatory oversight process of governing the energy sector in North America and Europe. The post-doctoral researcher will work
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whole-body cancer detection. We are interested in both technical development and clinical translation pipelines, leveraging resources at the Lucas Center for Imaging, synergies across the clinical MRI