24 computer-programmer-"U.S"-"U.S" Postdoctoral positions at University of Washington in United States
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instruction, knowledge representation, retrieval and analysis, health professions diversity, public health informatics, health workforce projections, teaching and program evaluation and competencies for primary
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projections, teaching and program evaluation and competencies for primary care. The Luo Lab in the Department of Biomedical Informatics and Medical Education has a Postdoctoral Scholar position open with a
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pulmonary vascular endothelial cells contributes to pulmonary vascular remodeling. Our current research program includes investigations into the role of hyperactive mTOR (mechanistic target of rapamycin) in
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-of-use water filter during use. Methods are expected to use LC-MS/MS and GC-MS workflow. These methods would be applied for laboratory testing and in a pilot testing program. Job Description Primary Duties
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independently to plan your own work and objectives. The appointment is viewed as a training or transitional period preparatory to an academic, industrial, governmental, or other full-time research or teaching
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of GI diseases to continue our work in functionally characterizing the impact of immune cells including ILCs in IBD. Our research program provides a highly collaborative and supportive training
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conditions, and brain tissue microstructure and functioning. The successful candidate will be working within a multi-disciplinary team of MRI physicists, computer scientists, radiologists, neuroscientists, and
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are looking for a postdoctoral researcher with physics or engineering expertise who will design and operate a 3D super-resolution ultrasound system, write control software, build computational imaging pipelines
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repository and computer servers. Run existing PET/MR brain image processing pipelines on the computer servers, produce the results, and communicate with the group members. Write computer codes for the above
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Position Summary The Foltz lab works at the intersection of translational immunology and computational biology. We study mechanisms of response and resistance to natural killer (NK) cell therapies