38 electrical-engineering-coding-theory Fellowship positions at University of Michigan
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(50%). Mission Statement Michigan Medicine improves the health of patients, populations and communities through excellence in education, patient care, community service, research and technology
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improves the health of patients, populations and communities through excellence in education, patient care, community service, research and technology development, and through leadership activities in
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meaningful information from noisy or ambiguous sensory signals? To what extent does neural plasticity in the auditory system occur via mechanisms dictated by classic theories of reinforcement learning, or does
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programming is a plus. Required Qualifications* Ph.D. degree in biomedical engineering, medical physics, electrical engineering, computer science, neuroscience, or equivalent disciplines. Good written and
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and interventional studies to facilitate our current understanding of neuromuscular function and regulation in the context of movement control and neuromuscular plasticity. Specifically, the lab has a
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in the position and outline skills and experience that directly relate to this position. Job Summary The Department of Biomedical Engineering at the University of Michigan is seeking applications for a
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expertise relates to this posting. Applications will be reviewed on a rolling basis until the position is filled. Job Summary The Department of Mechanical Engineering at the University of Michigan, in
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in the position and outline skills and experience that directly relate to this position. Job Summary The Materials Science and Engineering Department is seeking a Research Fellow who will be tasked
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perspectives. In addition to the program's current efforts to understand the intersections between social and environmental context and their impacts on population health, we continue to expand our portfolio and
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well as the implications of these motives to theories of decision-making, organizations, and public policy. At the heart of this work lies the idea that people are often motivated to hold (or avoid) specific beliefs