Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Category
-
Country
-
Program
-
Field
-
of Biology work on a wide range of cell systems and model organisms, including C. elegans, Drosophila, Tribolium, Xenopus, zebrafish, mice, yeast, maize, Ceratopteris, and others. The Department of Biology has
-
. This project uses zebrafish as a model to identify the signals that recruit regenerative cells to the site of injury. Genetic and pharmacological inhibition of signalling pathways will be used to identify key
-
Commun, 2023) and zebrafish (bioRxiv, 2025). -We developed an unsupervised learning scheme (PredPCA) that extracts the most informative components for predicting future inputs (Nature Mach Intell, 2021
-
, and zebrafish). The department employs over 175 individuals who provide a comprehensive range of animal husbandry, veterinary, and laboratory services across numerous vivaria. The UW animal care
-
experience with zebrafish animal research a strong plus! Working knowledge of database management, personal computers, and presentation and imaging software. Understanding of general research objectives
-
been studying the role of keratinocytes during zebrafish tail regeneration. We have identified an exciting new sub-population of keratinocytes that migrate rapidly to sites of injury. These cells
-
analysis and professional skills that are necessary for bioscience research and related non-academic careers. https://www.yorkshirebiosciencedtp.ac.uk Project Description: Epithelial tissues form protective
-
species (e.g., rodents, rabbits, swine, and zebrafish). The department employs over 175 individuals who provide a comprehensive range of animal husbandry, veterinary, and laboratory services across numerous
-
, development, and evolution. We especially encourage applications from candidates using non-mammalian models such as Drosophila or zebrafish, as well as other traditional genetic model systems such as
-
biological model systems (e.g., humans, rodents, birds, invertebrates, salamanders, lampreys, zebrafish, microbes, planaria, snakes, and plants) and mathematical and computational tools. Our faculty also