Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
, electrophysiology, and imaging teams across the system and is responsible for creating a unified surgical program that addresses the needs of all constituent hospitals. The appointee’s own clinical responsibilities
-
Postdocs. Supervises and directs Research Professionals, Research Specialists, Executive Assistants, and student employees. Prepare letters of recommendation for this staff as needed. Ensures excellent
-
Administration, Faculty, Postdocs, Human Resources, Financial Services, and other departmental stakeholders. Analyzes industry trends and monitors changes in sponsor regulations to ensure departmental compliance
-
intraoral images of study enrollees. Protects patients and data confidentiality by ensuring security of research data and personal health information and compliance with federal regulations and sponsor
-
cells, immunohistochemistry, ELISA, flow cytometry (FACS), protein biochemistry such as Western blotting and IP, fluorescence microscopy and/or live-cell imaging. Maintains technical and administrative
-
of highly accomplished faculty, postdocs, graduate students, and undergraduates, all of whom push the boundaries of their respective fields. The Department supports a PhD program in Geophysical Sciences
-
offers a full spectrum of general nuclear, cardiac, and molecular imaging exams. With a state-of-the-art PET Center and the only academic institution in the region with an on-site medical cyclotron and
-
variety of media including text, video, images, and illustrations. This role is a significant contributor to the science communications outreach of the Center and holds domain knowledge specific to applied
-
, program development, and collaborative integration with structural heart, advanced heart failure, electrophysiology, and imaging teams across the system and is responsible for creating a unified surgical
-
Telescope, with its ongoing development of powerful new imagers for measuring the Cosmic Microwave Background. Departmental researchers also make use of several telescopes (Hubble, Kepler, Chandra, Fermi, and