85 computer-science-programming-languages-"St"-"ST" Postdoctoral positions at Stanford University
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backgrounds trained in chemistry, chemical biology, microbiology, and/or biophysics fields. We have launched a collaborative antibacterial drug design program integrating chemical biology and mechanistic
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preparation and dissemination of findings at national and international conferences. Collaborate with investigators across rheumatology, pain medicine, biostatistics, informatics, and behavioral science
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immunology. Preferred qualifications: Experience in immunology, human immunology, mammalian cell culture, multi-color flow cytometry, cell sorting, gene transfer, murine models, computational biology, and
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Mathematics, Physics, Engineering, or Computer Science. This is a collaborative, cross-functional team, and project assignments will be tailored to match each postdoc’s strengths and growth goals. If you are
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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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, Outpatient, Carrier, TAF). Develop reproducible code and workflows for data cleaning, linkage, and analysis within Stanford’s secure computing environment. Collaborate with multidisciplinary teams
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their knowledge and skillset in mitochondrial biology would best fit this position. Required Qualifications: PhD in cell biology, molecular biology, stem cell biology, developmental biology, immunology, or cancer
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federally funded, interdisciplinary research program focused on improving healthcare delivery by studying and intervening in the human systems that support it. Based in the HEAL and Kim Labs at Stanford
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Posted on Fri, 10/10/2025 - 13:58 Important Info Deprecated / Faculty Sponsor (Last, First Name): Greicius, Michael Stanford Departments and Centers: Neurology and Neurological Sciences Postdoc
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Postdoctoral position in Computational Immunology We are looking for two motivated postdoctoral researchers to work on human macrophage biology in the Department of Pathology at Stanford. Successful candidates