129 maynooth-university-programmable-city-project Postdoctoral positions at Stanford University
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this position pay above the required minimum?: No. The expected base pay for this position is the Stanford University required minimum for all postdoctoral scholars appointed through the Office of Postdoctoral
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internal equity. Pay Range: $73,800 - $82,278 Open postdoctoral position through the Stanford Impact Labs Postdoctoral Fellowship Program (link is external) with the Fletcher Lab (link is external
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application materials to Corinne Beinat (cbeinat@stanford.edu (link sends e-mail) ) Does this position pay above the required minimum?: No. The expected base pay for this position is the Stanford University
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training program in clinical pain research, with a focus on maternal and childhood pain and bioinformatics, at Stanford University. Our overall goal is to train diverse, successful clinical pain scientists
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?: No. The expected base pay for this position is the Stanford University required minimum for all postdoctoral scholars appointed through the Office of Postdoctoral Affairs. The FY25 minimum is $76,383. Are you
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, curriculum design and implementation, program evaluation, and simulation as a teaching method. Opportunities to be involved in the administrative side of sim center operations are offered, active involvement
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including (but not limited to) the qualifications of the selected candidate, budget availability, and internal equity. Pay Range: 75000-78000 Project Description The Stanford Urologic Cancer Epidemiology Lab
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) Does this position pay above the required minimum?: No. The expected base pay for this position is the Stanford University required minimum for all postdoctoral scholars appointed through the Office of
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?: No. The expected base pay for this position is the Stanford University required minimum for all postdoctoral scholars appointed through the Office of Postdoctoral Affairs. The FY25 minimum is $76,383. Our
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This project focuses on understanding the role of protein glycosylation on cancer cells and immunosuppression. Our laboratory focuses on prostate and kidney cancers, where we have demonstrated significant