15 engineering-in-image-processing-"MONASH-UNIVERSITY" Postdoctoral positions at University of Virginia
-
/DNA transfections, lentiviral production and cell transduction, CRISPR engineering. In vivo : Subcutaneous/orthotopic tumor xenografts experiments, brain stereotactic injections, mouse handling
-
the development of novel therapies for coronary microvascular disease. The research program focuses on clinical translation and the development and validation of existing and novel cardiac imaging-based
-
injection, and cardiac/muscle lead surgery. Work autonomously to plan, conduct, and troubleshoot experiments recording various biosignals such as EEG, EKG, blood pressure, plethysmography, and breathing
-
that will be employed include flow cytometry, confocal and electron microscopy, in vivo two photon imaging, behavioral studies and transcriptomic techniques. The successful candidate will join the Center
-
across physics, mechanical engineering, materials sciences, network science, and more. This multidisciplinary and highly collaborative environment provides an exceptional opportunity for candidates
-
science of science, network science, and natural language processing. As part of a small research team, the postdoc will help lead efforts to provide a quantitative model of global competitiveness
-
science, engineering, bioinformatics, computational biology, or related fields. Preferred Qualifications: Multi-Omics and Genomics Expertise: Strong experience with large-scale datasets from public repositories, crucial
-
their communications Data Collection and Analysis: Collect data on the implementation process, including facilitator performance and participant feedback Analyze fidelity data to identify areas where
-
Collaborate with leading researchers within and outside UVA Qualifications: U.S. citizenship required Ph.D. in Data Science, Statistics, Computer Science, Network Science, Physics, Engineering, Sociology
-
on how the virus establishes latent infection with the capacity to undergo reactivation, in addition to using the virus to inform on epigenetic processes in neurons. More details about the Cliffe lab can