92 algorithm-development-"Multiple"-"Prof" "NTNU Norwegian University of Science and Technology" Postdoctoral positions at Stanford University
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systems. Includes establishing medical reasoning benchmarks and automated / scalable evaluation methods. Developing recommender algorithms to predict specialty care with large-language model based user
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omics to advance biological and clinical discoveries and develop next-generation theragnostics. The postdoctoral fellows will mainly focus on (1) creating novel computational algorithms to analyze and
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the complexities of the human regulome through advanced cell-free DNA profiling and developing cutting-edge computational algorithms and molecular profiling techniques. Our research focuses on early cancer detection
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number of measures used in any one study, many questions about the relationship between EFs and dyslexia remain unresolved. Here we take an innovative approach involving a) development of new, open-source
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University. This research opportunity will be focused primarily on the development and application of novel computational algorithms to analyze and integrate diverse omics datasets, including single-cell RNA
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our team. We are looking for postdoc candidates to develop and apply cutting-edge technologies in spatial transcriptomics, single-cell sequencing, machine learning, and functional genomics
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goal of informing public health policy. The postdoctoral scholar will have the opportunity to lead high impact research in infectious disease epidemiology and modeling across multiple pathogens. The work
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to contribute to Dr. Gardner’s current research (link is external) , The fellow will also be expected to support the formation and development of research ideas that will emerge from a new, interdisciplinary
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Stanford, and beyond. The fellow will also be involved in flagship projects which are large projects led by multiple Stanford faculty and funded through the newly opened Stanford Robotics Center that has
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of Ophthalmology, Stanford University School of Medicine. The Ophthalmic Microsystems Laboratory at Stanford is interested in developing new ocular therapeutics using novel micro and nanotechnologies. We integrate