14 computational-physics-postdoc Postdoctoral positions at University of Southern California
-
, information processing, computing, cybersecurity, and communications technologies. ISI’s 400 faculty, professional staff and graduate students carry out extraordinary information sciences research at three
-
USC’s Keck School of Medicine, Department of Medicine, is seeking a Postdoctoral/Research Associate. A newly established laboratory of Dr. Yao Wei Lu is recruiting two Postdoc Research Associates
-
neuromodulation The ideal candidate should have a PhD in Physics, Biophysics, Biomedical Engineering, Computer Science, Neuroscience or related fields. Prior research experience (publications and programming skills
-
populations. In this position, we are looking for a postdoctoral researcher with strong computational background for method development in population and statistical genetics. The position is funded by an NIH
-
online. Our new postdoc will work closely with CELDTech’s director, Brendesha Tynes, in all research and design phases including curriculum design, prototyping, interview protocols, data collection, data
-
vulnerability. We are further integrating advanced computational methodologies and cutting-edge genomic tools to strengthen these models. Successful candidates will lead projects, from designing projects
-
education in research specialization with advanced knowledge of equipment, procedures and analysis methods. Strong background in computer programming, mathematical modeling is required. Preferred Education
-
Computer Engineering within the USC Viterbi School of Engineering. The ideal candidate will have an extensive background in one or more of the following areas: Information theory, structured statistics
-
detector 3. Thermo Scientific Vitrobot in a humidity-controlled room 4. Essential tools for cryo-TEM grid preparation and storage High-performance computing resources for cryo-EM data handling/processing
-
assistive robots to aid seniors with stroke or children with autism. It is the home of the first operational quantum computing center in academia. Our alumni include Neil Armstrong, first human on the moon