119 software-verification-computer-science-"TCAT-Jacksboro" Postdoctoral positions at University of Washington
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qualification in Genetics, Bioinformatics, Computer science, Data science, Statistical Genomics or a related discipline involving the interrogation of ‘omics’ datasets. Hands-on experience with large-scale human
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Position Overview School / Campus / College: College of Arts and Sciences Organization: Biology Title: Postdoctoral Position in Quantitative Cell Biology in the MATSU lab Position Details Position
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the Required Qualifications section. Skills: Bioinformatics, Biomarkers, Computer Science, Data Analysis, Etiology, Exome Sequencing, GATK, Genetic Research, Linux, Neurodegeneration, PLINK (Software), Python
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Position Summary An organic synthetic chemistry/radiochemistry Postdoctoral position is available immediately. The potential candidate should be an energetic, highly motivated PhD in organic
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of scientific studies. Applicants with a strong background in computational biology are encouraged to apply. Job Description Primary Duties & Responsibilities: Information on being a postdoc at WashU in St. Louis
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, Experimentation, Flow Cytometry, Immunohistochemistry (IHC), Informatics, In Vitro Assays, In Vivo Assays, Laboratory Operations, Laboratory Techniques, Molecular Biology, Omics, Python (Programming Language
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multidisciplinary research team focused on fundamental challenges in tumor biology including dysregulated signaling, metastasis, treatment resistance, and recurrence. The post-doctoral position calls
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Science 371:1154). The position will involve utilizing human specimens, cell culture models (epithelial and immune cells) and testing hypothesis in mouse models of the disease. Appropriate training in all
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required for this position. More About This Job Preferred Qualifications: Ph.D. or M.D./Ph.D. in biological sciences or related fields. Preferred Qualifications Education: No additional education unless
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genetics and genomics, with expanded interests in computational biology, functional genomics, and neuroscience. Example projects within the university and with external partners: • Noncoding Variation in