12 postdoc-computational-biomedical-engineering PhD research jobs at The University of Iowa
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candidate will have (or be soon completing) a doctoral degree in biomedical engineering, chemical engineering, pharmaceutics, or a related field. The candidate must be highly motivated with evidence of
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are desirable. The successful candidate will be joining a team of biomedical engineers, cancer biologists, and radiation oncologists and will contribute to the ongoing work in the treatment of cancer and other
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., Pharm.D., or M.D. in biomedical or related sciences (Chemistry, Pharmacy, Molecular Biology, Biochemistry, Pathology, Biomedical Engineering, etc.) with at least one year of bench research experience
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with the skillsets, resources, and mentorship to get you to the next stage of your career. We welcome applicants from a wide range of backgrounds, including stem cell biology, biomedical engineering
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Reform. This NSF-funded (#2142873) project investigates the extent to which a change agent can influence reform in chemistry doctoral programs. The postdoc will be involved in designing programming
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microscopy techniques and image analysis (confocal, multiphoton, or other advanced imaging techniques) and/or electrophysiology. Demonstrated computational knowledge, use of ImageJ, and familiarity with a
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data to identify novel disease phenotypes. The candidates will work within a highly multi-disciplinary team of physicians, physiologists, electrical and biomedical engineers and computer scientists and
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project management on a large clinical trial. Required Qualifications: A Ph.D. in health services research, health outcomes, epidemiology, health economics, health informatics, biostatistics, or a closely
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cell technology. Experience with RNA sequencing, gene editing (CRISPR-Cas9), single particle imaging, and large data set analysis. Proficiency in programming languages like R, python, Matlab Online
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technology to track single GPCR molecules on cardiovascular cells derived from healthy and diseased patients. Through our collaboration with the Stanford Cardiovascular Institute, the lab has access to one