16 engineering-in-image-processing-"MONASH-UNIVERSITY" Postdoctoral positions at Harvard University
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Details Posted: Unknown Location: Salary: Summary: Summary here. Details Posted: 30-Aug-25 Location: Cambridge, Massachusetts Categories: Academic/Faculty Engineering Internal Number: 15017 School
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Details Title Postdoctoral position in AI for Engineering Applications School Harvard John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences Department/Area Applied Math Position Description
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strongly interdisciplinary. Specifically, our star technique is scanning electrochemical cell microscopy (SECCM) , a powerful electrochemical imaging technique for interrogating electrochemical processes
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strongly interdisciplinary. Specifically, our star technique is scanning electrochemical cell microscopy (SECCM) , a powerful electrochemical imaging technique for interrogating electrochemical processes
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understand how bacteria react and respond to stress and use this knowledge to engineer useful functions in bacteria. We invite applications from postdoctoral candidates with backgrounds in microbiology and
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imaginative Postdoctoral Researcher to join our team investigating fundamental mechanisms of developmental biology. Our lab focuses on understanding cellular and molecular processes that drive
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Applications are invited for a one-year Postdoctoral Research Fellow position with Professor Avi Loeb at Harvard University, leading the scientific commissioning and operation of a multi-sensor observatory
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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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Diseases (NIAID ) National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases (NIAMS ) National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering (NIBIB ) National Institute on Deafness and Other
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. The researcher will take primary responsibility for one or more of the following projects, depending on their interests and qualifications: (i) engineering robust strains of light-attracted, light-indifferent, and