102 phd-in-image-processing "https:" "UCL" Postdoctoral positions at University of Washington
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in tumor microenvironment of prostate and breast cancer. The group also studies various epigenetic processes (histone phosphorylation, methylation and acetylation) that drive these diseases and their
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Position Overview School / Campus / College: School of Medicine Organization: Otolaryngology / Head and Neck Surgery Title: Postdoctoral Scholar, Auditory Processing, Ngodup Lab, Bloedel Hearing
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. Qualifications Required Qualifications: Completed PhD in biomedical engineering, electrical engineering, physics, or a medical imaging related field. Experience with developing advanced pulse sequences
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Position Summary Postdoctoral Research Associate in the Dai Laboratory supports the faculty investigator by assisting with the design and prototype devices and equipment to support research projects
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interests and skills. The postdoctoral scholar will be supervised by and work closely with Drs. Ali Shojaie (http://faculty.washington.edu/ashojaie/ ) and James Floyd (https://gim.uw.edu/people/faculty/James
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work to generate reports, keep records, write manuscripts, prepare presentations, etc. The ideal candidate will have post-graduation research in immunology and have published (or under review) several
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Duties & Responsibilities: Information on being a postdoc at WashU in St. Louis can be found at https://postdoc.wustl.edu/prospective-postdocs-2/ . Trains under the supervision of a faculty mentor
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anticipated to focus on advancing imaging techniques within the lab and will provide a supportive role to other projects within the group. Individuals with engineering (biomedical and mechanical/materials
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. The postdoctoral scholar will contribute to an exciting research program within the Foy Lab (https://foylab.xyz/ ), focused on developing computational methods to enhance how we collect, analyze and use clinical
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involved in imaging, biomarker and genetic projects to better understand the causes, preclinical progression and pathology of Alzheimer’s disease. We encourage involvement by fellows in those studies