62 phd-in-concrete-and-structural-engineering Postdoctoral positions at University of Washington
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Qualifications: PhD in Environmental Engineering, Environmental Chemistry, Analytical Chemistry, Environmental Science, and/or other aligned discipline. Operation and optimization of LCMS and/or GCMS
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Position Summary Postdoctoral Research position open in the O’Brien Lab (Department of Biomedical Engineering, Danforth and Medical Campus). Dr. Christine O’Brien invites applicants to join her
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experiments and publish papers, under the supervision of the PI on a project in the broad area of epithelial cell mechanobiology. Mentor PhD students, assist in lab organization, and perform lab duties as
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the structural-property relationship in polymers through molecular engineering, structural engineering, and advanced characterization across scales. With these insights, we resolve conflicting design principles
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innovative science and hands-on fishing experience to improve tuna management. Specifically, the successful candidate will re-sequence tuna genomes to improve estimates of stock structure, reduce the
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management. Specifically, the successful candidate will re-sequence tuna genomes to improve estimates of stock structure, reduce the proportion of individuals that cannot be assigned to population, and develop
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. Qualifications Required Qualifications: Completed PhD in biomedical engineering, electrical engineering, physics, or a medical imaging related field. Experience with developing advanced pulse sequences
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accumulation. The lab seeks to understand the structural-property relationship in polymers through molecular engineering, structural engineering, and advanced characterization across scales. With these insights
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, interdisciplinary collaboration, applied science that informs management and policy, and travel to Europe to work with project partners. Key responsibilities include: Coordinating and leading meetings with research
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, functional genomics, and mouse engineering approaches to understand how cancer cells communicate with their neighbors, or the stromal cells, in the metastatic cascade. Our lab also applies biostatistics