Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
T32 Training Program in Pain and Substance Use Disorders is intended to develop postdoctoral trainees’ skills to become independent investigators in the fields of pain, substance abuse disorders, and
-
model APIs, cloud computing environments, and R for additional statistical analysis. For decision support prototype development and evaluation, web-based user interface design, human-computer interaction
-
for flexible load operation from IAW sectors in California. Our scope of work for this project is to develop and test a set of digital tools that enable water utilities to value, assess, and deploy energy demand
-
value innovation, and our program provides an enabling environment for fellows to conceptualize, develop, and lead independent research initiatives. The postdoctoral fellowship is anchored at Stanford
-
://roar.stanford.edu/ ROAR is a dynamic and collaborative team science project consisting of graduate students, postdocs, faculty, research coordinators, professional web developers, and school partnership coordinators
-
laboratory of Stephen Skirboll, MD and Albert Wong, MD, in the Department of Neurosurgery at Stanford University School of Medicine and the VA Palo Alto. We are interested in developing immunotherapies
-
Center on Early Childhood. (link is external) The program is designed to train fellows to conduct work that is equity-focused—centering systemic equity as an outcome interdisciplinary—examining
-
training program in clinical pain research, with a focus on maternal and childhood pain and bioinformatics, at Stanford University. Our overall goal is to train diverse, successful clinical pain scientists
-
will have the opportunity to engage with one another and with the broader Stanford HAI research community. They are also expected to participate in professional development, cohort-building, and other
-
. The Division of Pain Medicine is at the forefront of innovation in pain research, education, and patient care. Our postdoctoral program has successfully transitioned fellows into independent research careers