71 programming-"Multiple"-"U"-"Humboldt-Stiftung-Foundation" Postdoctoral positions at Stanford University in United States
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analysis techniques. About Lennox-Gastaut Syndrome: Lenox-Gastaut Syndrome is a severe form of epilepsy that often involves a combination of multiple seizure types, resulting in significant cognitive and
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, or sustainable agriculture. Experience working in interdisciplinary settings that combine multiple perspectives and disciplines, ideally across topics including nutrition, sustainable food choices, food systems
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surgical resident interested in medical education. The enrollment period for this program would be July 1, 2025 through June 30th, 2027. This is a two-year, funded position intended for a current surgical
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learning to investigate how the human brain develops diverse cell types and forms complex neural circuits. We are particularly interested in how these developmental programs are disrupted in
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Affairs. The FY25 minimum is $76,383. Our postdoctoral research fellowship program is dedicated to preparing scholars for an academic career in the domains of pediatric perioperative, pain, sleep, and/or
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multiple modalities (e.g. chemical, mechanical, and electrical) into microdevices, with feature sizes under one millimeter in length. The integrated full-sized devices are small enough to be implanted
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through the Stanford Impact Labs Postdoctoral Fellowship Program (link is external) with Profs. Irene Lo, Itai Ashlagi, and the Stanford Impact Lab on Equitable Access to Education Postdoctoral Fellow
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to ongoing research and programming efforts within Stanford CARE’s key strategic focus areas: Lung Cancer in Never Smokers, Gastric Cancer, and Cardiometabolic Disease, as well as our Journal of Asian Health
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Biology, Bioinformatics, Computer Science, or a related field • Strong programming skills in R and/or Python • Experience with analysis of single-cell sequencing data • Familiarity with spatial
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federally funded, interdisciplinary research program focused on improving healthcare delivery by studying and intervening in the human systems that support it. Based in the HEAL and Kim Labs at Stanford