100 computer-science-intern "https:" "https:" "https:" "https:" "UCL" "UCL" Postdoctoral positions at University of Washington
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can be found at https://postdoc.wustl.edu/prospective-postdocs-2/ . For more information on the Sibley Lab, please visit https://sites.wustl.edu/sibleylab . Trains under the supervision of a faculty
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found at https://postdoc.wustl.edu/prospective-postdocs-2/ . For information on the Schwartz lab, please visit https://djschwartzlab.wustl.edu/ . Trains under the supervision of a faculty mentor including
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experience unless stated elsewhere in the job posting. Skills: 3D Imaging, Collaboration, Communication, Computer Coding, Data Analysis, Data Interpretations, Data Science, Electroencephalogram (EEG
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, genetic engineering with CRISPR, disease modeling, transplantation into animal models of diabetes, biomedical engineering, bioinformatics, and single-cell sequencing technologies. Job Description Primary
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postdoc at WashU in St. Louis can be found at https://postdoc.wustl.edu/prospective-postdocs-2/ . For more information on the lab please visit https://milbrandtlab.wustl.edu/ . Working Conditions: This
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Position Summary A postdoctoral (Ph.D. or M.D./Ph.D.) opportunity to study myeloid cell biology and its implications for immunotherapy is available to join the laboratory of Dr. Eynav Klechevsky
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or more projects, learning advanced cellular and molecular biology and anaerobic microbiology techniques. The candidate’s day will be split between benchwork to generate data, and computer work to generate
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are strongly encouraged to apply. Job Description Primary Duties & Responsibilities: Information on being a postdoc at WashU in St. Louis can be found at https://postdoc.wustl.edu/prospective-postdocs-2
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Position Summary WashU Medicine, Department of Neurology, has an opening for a Postdoctoral Research Associate to join the NeuroGenomics and Informatics Center (NGI). The successful candidate will
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/i/a screening, single-cell multiomics, tissue engineering, and animal models. Our current research primarily focuses on four key areas: 1) Developing robust, chemically defined differentiation