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curious to deliver work that matters, your journey starts here! Innovation. Interdisciplinary collaboration. Complex problem solving. In Carnegie Mellon University's Department of Mechanical Engineering
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in accordance with the applicants’ interests and expertise, but will broadly be related to the neural mechanisms underlying the cognitive control of movement and non-motor processes (such as language
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computational models with microbiome-driven mechanisms and lay the groundwork for studies on microbiome modulation as a therapeutic strategy. Integrating clinical expertise and advanced molecular analyses ensures
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computational models with microbiome-driven mechanisms and lay the groundwork for studies on microbiome modulation as a therapeutic strategy. Integrating clinical expertise and advanced molecular analyses ensures
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CBS - Postdoctoral Position, Artificial Intelligence Applied to Metabolomics for Health Applications
metabolomics) to achieve systems-level insights into disease mechanisms. Identification and validation of clinically relevant metabolic biomarkers for early disease detection, prognosis, and treatment response
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curious to deliver work that matters, your journey starts here! Innovation. Interdisciplinary collaboration. Complex problem solving. In Carnegie Mellon University’s Department of Mechanical Engineering
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techniques to understand charge transport mechanisms in novel classes of organic electrolytes for use in emerging battery technologies and, based on these studies, to develop new electrolyte compositions
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computing - Correlated phenomena and quantum geometry effects in moiré superlattices and flat-band systems. - Transport phenomena in superconducting and electronic quantum devices. - Microscopic mechanisms
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simulations, statistical mechanics, computer programming (e.g., C++, Python), polymer theory, molecular modeling (e.g., of proteins, nucleic acids, ligands), coarse-grain and polymer model development
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of GI diseases to continue our work in functionally characterizing the impact of immune cells including ILCs in IBD. Our research program provides a highly collaborative and supportive training