72 channel-coding-electrical-engineering Postdoctoral positions at Stanford University
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to contribute to Dr. Gardner’s current research (link is external) , The fellow will also be expected to support the formation and development of research ideas that will emerge from a new, interdisciplinary
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stakeholders. The post-doc will support dive surveys to assess the current state of both modern and historical shipwrecks; the biodiversity context of the wrecks, as well as biodiversity assessments of the local
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-specific networks driving the cellular responses. Given the complexity and dynamic state of signaling networks, the current understanding of their constituents and how they are spatiotemporally regulated in
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-author manuscript with related analysis code and references later during the recruitment process. Stanford is an equal opportunity employer and all qualified applicants will receive consideration without
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) (link is external) leverages the current moment of revolutionary science and fosters deep omnidirectional collaboration across sectors, seeking to change the way that research in early childhood is
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particularly interested in leveraging the current technologies emerging in the stem cell field to develop more efficient and effective stem cell-based therapies for spinal cord injury, stroke, vascular dementia
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background in Computer Science, Informatics/Biomedical Data Science, Engineering, Statistics, Computational Biology, or a related field Prior experience in computer vision, with application of deep learning
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Qualifications: • Doctoral degree with quantitative training (ideally in econometrics) or relevant research experience. • Strong coding skills in R, Stata, or other statistical software package. • Good
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related to protein homology modeling, ligand docking and drug design to develop the next generation of safer anesthetics. Specifically, this individual will initially be an integral developer of a large
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to the in vivo study of retinal ganglion cell and astrocyte signal transduction. Current research in the Kapiloff lab addresses how calcium/calmodulin protein kinase II and cAMP signaling contribute