89 computer-programmer-"Multiple"-"U" Postdoctoral positions at Stanford University in United States
Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
for all postdoctoral scholars appointed through the Office of Postdoctoral Affairs. The FY25 minimum is $73,800. The Mackall Laboratory is seeking a creative and motivated computational immunologist to join
-
cell biology including neuroscience, GPCRs or related techniques, and/or (3) computational biology are encouraged to apply. We welcome applications from women, minorities, and other underrepresented
-
on manuscripts, presentations, and research proposals Required Qualifications: PhD in psychology, neuroscience, biostatistics, computer science, or a related field. Strong interpersonal and technical skills
-
research. Proven experience with protocol development and research leadership. Excellent organizational skills and the ability to maintain meticulous records. Ability to plan and prioritize own work to meet
-
use of cutting-edge informatics to prioritize causal variants for validation using functional genomics, including CRISPR. The overall goals of this work are to define novel disease targets and context
-
, mouse models, standard molecular biology and biochemistry, FACS/flow-cytometry analysis, genetic manipulation of cells (e.g., CRISPR), and microscopy. Candidates with experience in computational analysis
-
experience using mouse models of disease. Priority will be given to applicants with prior training in pulmonary biology, or candidates with expertise in computational biology or single cell transcriptomics
-
or the interest in learning programming is highly desirable. A successful candidate will interact closely with computational biologists and be responsible for designing and executing experiments that will, in part
-
Postdoctoral Affairs. The FY25 minimum is $76,383. The Stanford Natural Capital Project seeks candidates to support a research program aimed at the implementation and scaling of natural capital approaches within
-
new areas of research that cross classical disciplinary boundaries. Our department studies the surface and interiors of the Earth, Moon, and planets through laboratory experiments, computational and