20 phd-in-image-processing Postdoctoral positions at University of Washington in United States
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to Rui Tang, PhD, Assistant Professor at ruit@wustl.edu . Cover letter expressing your interest and highlighting your relevant experience. Curriculum Vitae (CV) with a list of publications. Contact
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: PhD in biology, physiology, biomedical engineering, or a related field. Demonstrated skill in handling mouse and rat pups, small animal procedures, and in vivo imaging. Familiarity with cardiac
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vulnerability or survival during neurodegenerative conditions in vivo. Responsibilities of the postdoc will include, but are not limited to: in vivo imaging of biosensors to read out diversity and dynamics
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healing, and nuclear mechanosensing. The successful candidate will have established experience in the following areas: (a) imaging techniques such as fluorescence, confocal, and multi-photon microscopy, (b
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genetic analyses of amyloid imaging identify new genes for Alzheimer disease ”, Acta Neuropathol Commun, 2023 PMID: 37101235 Working Conditions: This position works in a laboratory environment with
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experience. Applicant Special Instructions: To apply, please submit the following documents to Rui Tang, PhD, Assistant Professor at ruit@wustl.edu . Cover letter expressing your interest and highlighting your
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research group. The successful candidate will conduct original research in quantitative live-cell fluorescence microscopy, focusing on the actin cytoskeleton’s role in membrane trafficking processes in human
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PhD or a foreign equivalent. The current project seeks to revolutionize the entire process from data to prediction with a paramount focus on reproducibility and extensibility. The ideal candidate
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, focusing on the actin cytoskeleton’s role in membrane trafficking processes in human induced pluripotent stem cells. Position Responsibilities: • Conduct original research in cellular biophysics
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infection of heart valves. The postdoc would lead an investigation of bacteria-blood cell interactions using flow cytometry, imaging flow cytometry and gene expression analysis with nanostring nCounter