27 parallel-and-distributed-computing-"DIFFER" Fellowship research jobs at Indiana University in United States
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Bloomington Position Summary Indiana University, Bloomington Luddy School of Informatics, Computing, and Engineering Department of Intelligent Systems Engineering Postdoctoral Fellow in Bio-Photonics and
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, organic chemistry, inorganic chemistry, physical chemistry, and biochemistry. Our department is in the top in the US, with our analytical chemistry program often ranked in the top 10 , as well as particular
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IU Bloomington Intelligent Systems Engineering Location Bloomington Position Summary Indiana University, Bloomington Luddy School of Informatics, Computing, and Engineering Leung Research Group
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dysfunction, mechanisms of immune regulation, and sex differences in PH. The successful candidate will be actively involved in ongoing multi-project settings in a highly productive research environment
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dysfunction, angiogenesis, mechanisms of immune regulation, and sex differences in PH. The team seeks a talented and motivated Postdoc with an excessive experience in molecular and cell biology research
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for one or more outstanding, highly motivated post-doctoral research fellows with special interest in human genomics/computational systems biology to work on multi-omics analyses of Alzheimer’s disease and
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methods and transmission electron microscopy will take place in parallel with neuropathological and structural studies. The Dementia Laboratory has active collaborations with national and international
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for Computational Biology and Bioinformatics (CCBB), and multiple NIH sponsored multicenter programs including the Alzheimer’s Disease Genetics Consortium (ADGC), Alzheimer’s Disease Sequencing Project (ADSP
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of artificial intelligence and behavioral neuroscience. This individual will join our interdisciplinary team of computer scientists and behavioral neuroscientists seeking to identify the mechanistic and
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photoreceptors in marine Synechococcus using CRISPR and protein biochemistry approaches. This project is funded by the NSF Systems and Synthetic Biology Program and builds on our successful initial studies of Type