27 parallel-and-distributed-computing-phd-"Meta"-"Meta" research jobs at The University of Chicago
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Department BSD MGC - Administration About the Department The Post-Baccalaureate (Post-Bac) program in Cell, Developmental and Molecular Biology at the University of Chicago is designed to provide
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working with high performance computers (e.g., parallelizing and distributing code). Experience in distributed data management and workflow systems. Preferred Competencies Ability to work independently and
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September 2025. The position requires a PhD in History or a related field and demonstrated commitment to undergraduate teaching. The successful candidate will teach a total of three courses per year
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and follow-up assessments. Provides administrative support (i.e. petty cash distribution, equipment inventory and maintenance, scientific literature reviews, etc.) and maintains detailed records
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science course policies and community college certificate program development. Grounded in the study of implementation, scale, and sustainability, Outlier conducts applied research and evaluation in close
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://www.chicagobooth.edu/. Job Summary The Principal Researcher provides a supportive research environment to a highly qualified recent PhD. The Principal Researcher collaborates with Professor Dan Adelman in
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which intuition, reasoning, and social interaction produce beliefs, judgments, and choices. The Mindworks Research Assistant supports faculty members, research professionals, and PhD candidates with
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research project and/or group. Plans and delivers technical workshops for faculty, PhD students, and research professionals. Uses subject matter and best practices knowledge to perform lab and/or research
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. Responsibilities Assisting in maintaining and documenting animal health and welfare. Training mice to perform computer-controlled behavioral tasks. Assisting in collecting, maintaining and analyzing behavioral
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graduate levels. The Department is home to world-class faculty who advance statistical, computational, and mathematical methodology across a broad range of scientific domains. Professor Claire Donnat’s