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: Cellular and Molecular Medicine Description: Interested in Neural Stem Cells (NSCs) physiology and function? Want to monitor NSCs activation and division using in vivo live imaging approaches in behaving
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The Chen Lab at the Brain and Mind Research Institute, University of Ottawa is seeking candidates for two postdoctoral positions in molecular/system neuroscience. The Chen lab is specialized in
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simulations and data analysis, detector and electronics R&D, and experiment-related operations, including: Participating in data collection including shift-taking at PSI Participating in detector and experiment
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addresses these fundamental challenges by employing single-molecule fluorescence microscopy to visualize mRNAs in their cellular context. Coupling these techniques with genetic and molecular biology
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both in vitro and in vivo models, such as patient-derived organoids and xenografts. We apply molecular profiling (genomics and transcriptomics) along with histological analysis to explore the mechanisms
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are available A CV detailing your academic accomplishments A copy of one relevant publication The names and contact information of two potential referees (e.g., current and former research supervisors
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administrative heath and economic data. In addition to new methods development and evaluations, the job responsibilities include software development (mostly in R), possibly theory development, simulation studies
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: - To lead the computational part of a collaborative project on AI-assisted design of OPVs - To become knowledgeable in the field of OPVs and the relevant simulations - To learn relevant machine learning
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University of British Columbia | Northern British Columbia Fort Nelson, British Columbia | Canada | about 2 months ago
using various HPC clusters for large scale simulations of complex nonlinear partial differential equations (PDEs). · Experience of publishing research in high-impact, peer-reviewed journals and present
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recovery. The focus of the lab is to determine how brain circuits reorganize after a stroke, contributions of these reorganizational process to motor function, molecular signatures that drive recovery and