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position. Applicants should have a PhD degree (or expect to receive a PhD degree by June 15, 2025) in Psychology or allied fields (e.g., Sociology) with an interest in conducting research relevant to racial
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Postdoctoral Research Associate - Improving Sea Ice and Coupled Climate Models with Machine Learning
learning. Our previous work has demonstrated that neural networks can skillfully predict sea ice data assimilation increments, which represent structural model errors (https://doi.org/10.1029/2023MS003757
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contributions and expertise *Names and contact information for three references PhD is expected by the start date. Appointments are for one year, with the possibility of renewal based on continued funding and
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who are unable to upload unofficial transcripts may send official transcripts to Politics Postdoc Search, Department of Politics, 001 Fisher Hall, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ 08540. A PhD is
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systems at Princeton and in NOAA, working alongside GFDL model developers and software engineers to advance quality assurance and data dissemination capabilities for making high-resolution earth system
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position. Applicants should have a PhD degree (or expect to receive a PhD degree by June 15, 2025) in Psychology or allied fields (e.g., Sociology) with an interest in conducting research relevant to racial
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of ecology, evolution, and/or behavior, while also contributing to Princeton University's excellence and diversity, broadly defined. The Program is intended to foster the onward scientific careers
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ability to independently lead research projects. Candidates must also be comfortable working with and mentoring graduate and undergraduate student researchers. To be eligible for this position, a PhD in
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of laminar/neuropixel probes and electrical microstimulation to study attention and decision making networks in a behaving animal model together with parallel studies in humans. The project is part of a NIMH
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models, programming, and quantitative methods. Preferred qualifications include experience in reinforcement learning, neural networks, and/or statistics. Questions can be addressed to Professor Nathaniel