Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
, qPCR thermal cyclers, and computers. Physical Demands and Work Environment Be capable of working in a biosafety cabinet for several hours in a seated position. Overview About the Herbert and Jacqueline
-
Pension Eligibility ABP Qualifications Minimum Education and Experience PhD in biomechanics, kinesiology, biomedical engineering, computer science, or a closely related discipline. Experience with motion
-
communicate in English to sufficiently perform the job duties. Must be computer literate with proficiency and working knowledge of database and reporting tools such as Microsoft Word, Excel and PowerPoint. Must
-
experiential learning courses, as well as contributing lectures to core plant pathology courses that support required and elective curricula in the Undergraduate Program in Plant Science and Graduate Program in
-
undergraduates in scientific research projects. ESSENTIAL DUTIES & RESPONSIBILITIES INCLUDE: 1) Computer simulations of protein structure and computational protein design of small peptides and proteins. 2
-
mammalian or microbial systems, preferred. Familiarity with computational analysis or coding (e.g., R, Python), preferred. Equipment Utilized Physical Demands and Work Environment PHYSICAL DEMANDS: Standing
-
interface of bioinformatics, microbiome ecology, and metabolomics, contributing to both computational analyses and laboratory workflows. This position offers the opportunity to lead integrative projects
-
including strongly correlated fermion materials, high-temperature superconductivity, topological electronic states of matter, developments and applications of computational methods at the density-functional
-
, make necessary calculations, presents results at national conferences, and publish the results on high impact journals. Develops own research project(s) under the guidance of the PI. Instructs and trains
-
to oversee research activities outlined in NSF Grant 2520154 “Understanding Expectation-Driven Learning in Early Childhood: An Experimental and Computational Investigation,” under the supervision of Dr. Kimele