305 computer-science-programming-languages-"UCL"-"UCL" positions at Stanford University
Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Listed
-
Category
-
Program
-
Field
-
Postdoctoral Affairs. The FY25 minimum is $76,383. The Stanford Natural Capital Project seeks candidates to support a research program aimed at the implementation and scaling of natural capital approaches within
-
, EBV, HBV, HPV) and chemical biology trainees with a willingness and aptitude for learning new experimental systems. Our projects require an adaptable mix of molecular virology as well as protein
-
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
-
, Computer Science, Biomedical Engineering, or related field. • Demonstrated expertise in at least one of the following: – Large‑scale macaque electrophysiology (ideally Neuropixels) – Cognitive & behavioural
-
technology and b) large-scale data collection in a diverse sample spanning over 250 schools across 30 states to answer three significant questions regarding the mechanisms of word reading difficulties such as
-
experience using mouse models of disease. Priority will be given to applicants with prior training in pulmonary biology, or candidates with expertise in computational biology or single cell transcriptomics
-
Cultures in the Division of Literatures, Cultures, and Languages at Stanford University is seeking a Postdoctoral Fellow working in Iberian or Latin American culture and literature of any period. We invite
-
: Neurology and Neurological Sciences Postdoc Appointment Term: 1 year, renewable Appointment Start Date: January 1, 2026 Group or Departmental Website: https://med.stanford.edu/neurology.html (link is external
-
, United States of America [map ] Subject Area: Psychology / Affective Science Appl Deadline: 2025/10/15 11:59PM * (listed until 2025/10/15) Position Description: Apply Position Description The Department of Psychology
-
arterial hypertension using in vivo Perturb-seq. This project is related to a new NIH-funded Program Project Grant aimed at identifying differences and similarities in gene function across vascular cell