71 phd-in-architecture-and-built-environment Postdoctoral positions at Duke University
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regarding all facets of the Postdoctoral Appointee's research activities. Must hold a PhD Duke is an Equal Opportunity Employer committed to providing employment opportunity without regard to an individual's
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and non-invasive neurostimulation. The strong interdisciplinary and collaborative environment at Duke is ideal for our multi-scale modeling research efforts. An earned PhD and previous experience in
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, segmentation, and classification, including anomaly detection, and semi-supervised learning. He/she will work in a thriving research and clinical environment where he/she will be able to interact with
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scientific meetings DEFINITION: The Postdoctoral Appointee holds a PhD or equivalent doctorate (e.g. ScD, MD, DVM). Candidates with non-US degrees may be required to provide proof of degree equivalency. A
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outside Duke University. Preferred qualifications: PhD (completed in the last 1-5 years or PhD candidate) in a quantitative discipline, including Computational Biology, Bioinformatics, Computer Science
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-of-the-art IT infrastructure. Ideal candidates should hold a PhD in the area of Computer Science or Electrical and Computer Engineering and have strong programming skills including Python. Past work in
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independent research activities under the guidance of a faculty mentor in preparation for a full time academic or research career DEFINITION The Postdoctoral Appointee holds a PhD or equivalent doctorate (el gl
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, creative, individual to pursue applications in ultrasound microvascular imaging in an innovative, collaborative environment. We are engaged in both development of super-resolution ultrasound imaging and its
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Training Program. This position will be funded by our NIDDK T32. Eligibility: U.S. citizenship or permanent residency required PhD applicants must have been awarded their degree or anticipated prior to June
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Center for Precision Microbiome Engineering (PreMiEr ) focused on studying the built microbiome, microbial dark matter, and engineering the built environment to promote better health outcomes; the NIEHS