Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Listed
-
Category
-
Country
-
Program
-
Field
-
43 Salary Range $19.18-30.68/hour Type of Position Staff Position Time Status Full-Time Required Education BA Click here for more information about equivalencies: https://hr.uky.edu/employment/working
-
, a background in ocular perfusion is necessary for this position. We offer: A highly collaborative, supportive environment spanning wet‑lab, computational, and translational efforts, embedded in
-
experience with NMR and wet-lab chemistry Willing to work within a multidisciplinary and collaborative research environment Curiosity and excitement to learn Good knowledge of spoken English Our Offer: We work
-
issues that arise, and contribute intellectually to the project. For more information, visit: https://wyss.harvard.edu/focus-area/biomimetic-therapeutic-diagnostics/ What you'll do: Perform microfluidic
-
, self-motivated employee at our Snyder Hall site to work in the UMGC's Innovation Lab (http://genomics.umn.edu/research-innovation.php). The successful candidate will help to conduct experiments under
-
operational staff, lecturers, academic apprentices, postdoctoral scholars, national and international researchers, and 6 fully staffed life science laboratories (2 wet labs, and 4 social science labs), and the
-
necessary. Processes supported will include photolithography, wet and dry etching, and both physical and chemical vapor deposition. Publishing results as appropriate. Preparing training materials for correct
-
candidate, you are at the core of the project. You will perform all wet lab analyses using advanced techniques such as cell culture, reporter analyses and RNA-sequencing. You will perform the data analysis
-
atmosphere manipulation of air- and moisture-sensitive chemicals as well as analytical techniques for characterizing the newly synthesized molecules and polymers (NMR, IR, Mass spec, single crystal XRD, GPC
-
of Molecular Medicine and Therapeutics at The Ohio State University College of Medicine. Lab website: http://u.osu.edu/mathur Our goal is to use the lens of metabolism to better understand and predict cancer