106 computer-programmer-"UCL"-"UCL" Fellowship positions at University of British Columbia
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The L’Oréal USA For Women in Science fellowship program awards five women postdoctoral scientists annually with grants of $60,000 each for their contributions in Science, Technology, Engineering and
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settings in diagnosing, triaging and discharging children with serious infections, and other co-morbidities. The exciting next stage of this program will be to expand to multiple countries in East and West
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, students must be enrolled or accepted in a full-time Canadian Postdoctoral program and must be a Canadian resident or permanent resident or hold a valid Canadian work permit or student visa.
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, engineers, computer scientists, nuclear medicine physicians, …) towards the overall aim of enabling translational and physician-in-the-loop AI for medical imaging. Our research team is multicultural and
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Global Affairs Canada For further information on the program, please visit Interchange Canada Who can apply: Permanent residents in Canada and Canadian citizens in Canada. Important messages We
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Fellowships competitions. Applicants who are or plan to be registered in a Master’s program should refer to the Affiliated Fellowships Master's Program , while students who are or plan to be registered in a
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birth, only 28%* of researchers are women and only 3% of Scientific Nobel Prizes are awarded to them. That is why, for the past 19 years, the L’Oréal-UNESCO For Women in Science Programme has worked
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collaboration with laboratories computational biologists. Lead independent research projects and contribute to collaborative efforts within the lab. Present findings in manuscripts, conferences, and funding
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capacity for the integration of policy research into decision-making. This program aims to enhance understanding and communication between health researchers and health system decision-makers to promote
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aim of this programme is to facilitate and strengthen collaboration with academic researchers in scientific fields that are priorities for France and Canada, as defined at the first Joint Committee