Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Listed
-
Employer
-
Field
-
Qualifications Successful candidates will have PhD completed within the last 5 years in computer science, data science, biomedical engineering, computational linguistics, medical informatics, or a related
-
Deposit Research Unit (MDRU) at the University of British Columbia (UBC) is seeking a highly motivated Postdoctoral Research Fellow to join a multi-disciplinary research programme focused on Reduced
-
The University of British Columbia (UBC) | Vancouver UBC, British Columbia | Canada | about 1 month ago
Programme? Not funded by a EU programme Reference Number EU-58948 Is the Job related to staff position within a Research Infrastructure? No Offer Description A postdoctoral fellow is being sought to work on a
-
. Supervision Given Supervising undergraduate students Providing guidance to other lab members, as required Qualifications Minimum Qualifications PhD in a relevant life science or computational discipline (e.g
-
interest in applied cancer genomics and the technical skills to analyze and interpret a uniquely rich collection of NGS datasets. SickKids has excellent infrastructure for computational genomics and
-
Laboratory Science (BMLSc)) and graduate (MSc, PhD) levels with the graduate program, one of the largest in the Faculty of Medicine, which has been recognized by UBC for its quality. The Department plays a
-
leading edge research into improved substance use care across BC. To this end, the BCCSU develops evidence-based training curricula, program standards, and practice guidelines while networking regional
-
also have a track record in post-secondary teaching. The position may be awarded as a postdoctoral fellowship to a researcher who has finished their PhD, or to an individual outside the academic
-
action targets researchers holding a PhD who wish to carry out their research activities abroad, acquire new skills and develop their careers. PFs help researchers gain experience in other countries
-
basic science with biotech applications and combines rich functional assays with cutting-edge computational biology. Our method relies on aptamer-based sensors to recognise each specific metabolite target