38 evolution "https:" "https:" "https:" "https:" "https:" "Washington University in St" positions at SciLifeLab in Sweden
Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
gender equality and diversity as a strength and an asset. Description of the workplace The Department of Immunotechnology conducts research ranging from advanced technology development to biomedical
-
division The Division of Biomedical Engineering is part of the Department of Materials Science, and Engineering at the Ångström Laboratory. We perform research within the development of miniaturized
-
the DDLS program, which has four strategic areas: cell and molecular biology, evolution and biodiversity, precision medicine and diagnostics, epidemiology and biology of infection. For more information
-
close connection with the clinical activities at the Academic Hospital and includes both basic studies on disease causes and the development and evaluation of improved diagnostics and new treatment
-
on development of novel computational methods with state-of-the-art machine learning for gaining fundamental insights into healthy and diseased human tissues of the heart, cardiovascular system, and
-
including researchers in archaeology, anthropology, genetics, evolution, biodiversity and more, as well as to e.g. museum staff and contract archaeologists. The interest for the unit’s services is large and
-
DNA unit, you are part of a team that includes staff at Stockholm University, and is part of a research environment that includes the Human Evolution research program at Uppsala University and the
-
Job description The Drug Discovery & Development platform at the Science for Life Laboratory (SciLifeLab DDD) is a national infrastructure for academic drug development with the task of translating
-
evolution across different genomic regions by developing interpretable and efficient methods in comparative pangenomics, leveraging machine learning methods and statistical analysis (https://cgrlab.github.io
-
on methodological development in cryo-electron microscopy (cryo-EM), particularly in image reconstruction and 3D volumetric analysis of macromolecular structures. Rather than aiming to incrementally optimize existing