Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
the Department of Environmental Health at Harvard University has openings for highly motivated postdocs to develop and apply novel computational approaches for next generation sequencing data analysis
-
life-and-death struggle against lethal stresses in their microscopic world. We study how microbes adapt to their ever-changing environment, using simple and complex survival strategies. We hope to deeply
-
and engineering staff on computing architecture, including networking, data pipeline design and storage; data analysis and data collection software; and machine learning research Collaborate with other
-
for extraterrestrial techno signatures and analysis of data from the Galileo Project observatories. The successful candidate will have access to local computing facilities and will have the opportunity to interact and
-
, Computer Science, Electrical Engineering, Geophysics, Applied Mathematics, or a closely related field. Demonstrated strong research skills, evidenced by high-quality publications in top-tier machine learning/AI
-
at nanoscale sites of complex electrodes. We aim to expand the capability and applications of this technique to demystify activity at complex electrodes over several length scales (nano- to macro), attempt new
-
immunofluorescence and antibody validation Immunofluorescence staining of tissues, microscopy, image analysis Contribute to general lab tasks Maintaining accurate and detailed records of experiments Basic
-
development of researchers who are transitioning from training environments in the physical, mathematical, computational sciences and/or engineering into postdoctoral work in the biological sciences, and who
-
the generation of iPS cells. -Embryo manipulation/in vitro fertilization techniques. -Developmental neuroscience. -The biology of aging. -Preparation and analysis of next generation sequencing studies
-
complex survival strategies. We hope to deeply understand how bacteria react and respond to stress and use this knowledge to engineer useful functions in bacteria. We invite applications from postdoctoral