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world to develop knowledge necessary to realize that vision. We look for the brightest minds in the natural sciences, engineering, materials science, policy, economics, and business who are interested in tackling
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, Biomedical Engineering, Computational Biology, or a related field. Strong background in signal processing, including neuroimaging and/or electrophysiology (EEG, MEG) data analysis. Expertise in computational
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availability, and internal equity. Pay Range: $73,800 - $93,000 The Bioengineering Department at Stanford University is inviting applications for an Engineering Education Fellow, focusing on curricular design
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Posted on Wed, 08/07/2024 - 14:53 Important Info Faculty Sponsor (Last, First Name): Boehm, Alexandria Stanford Departments and Centers: Civil and Environ Engineering Oceans Postdoc Appointment Term
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of infectious diseases research and provides a strong community of scientific colleagues and students. Required Qualifications: The ideal candidate will have a PhD in Epidemiology, Engineering, Data Science
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recipients—coming from fields such as computer science, earth systems science, economics, engineering, health policy, political science, and sociology—to pursue policy-relevant research on topics related
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: Candidate must have a strong quantitative background, with a PhD in computational biology, bioinformatics, biomedical data science, biomedical engineering, computer science, electrical engineering, statistics
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technology. The successful candidate will contribute to projects focused on gene therapy applications and the development of innovative viral delivery systems for therapeutic interventions, and genetic
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the Office of Postdoctoral Affairs. The FY25 minimum is $73,800. The Mackall Lab is pleased to offer a Postdoctoral Fellow position with a focus on T cell engineering in the Stanford Center Cancer Cell Therapy
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multidisciplinary team including physicists, radiation oncologists, biologists, and engineers. Key Responsibilities: Deliver and optimize ultra-high dose rate (FLASH) radiotherapy to small animals using electron