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Description The Urbanization and Health Lab at the University of Washington invites applications for a one-year (potentially renewable for a second year) full time postdoctoral researcher position funded by
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Position Summary The Marti Lab builds next-generation imaging tools and AI methods to track how health, aging, and disease unfold deep inside living organisms, over weeks to lifetimes. Job
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progression. The models are informed by a variety of experimental data, utilize different model structures/modeling techniques, are often closed source or coded in proprietary software packages with poor
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synthesis procedures for the formation of porous materials and their organic linkers. Characterize structure and physical properties of materials and determine structure-property relationships with x-ray
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interdisciplinary environment where world-class researchers with expertise in computing and software, biochemistry, genome sciences, biological structure, pharmacology, immunology and other basic science disciplines
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for this position. Work Experience: No specific work experience is required for this position. Skills: Animal Models, Bioinformatic Analysis, Cell Cultures, Communication, Critical Thinking, Library Construction
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Qualifications: Experience with regulatory genomics, noncoding variant interpretation, or genome assembly/structural variant detection. At least two first-author publications in peer-reviewed journals. Strong
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laboratory, which focuses on developing optical spectroscopy and imaging tools to solve global problems in reproductive health. The successful candidate will have the opportunity to work with a
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multidisciplinary approach, spanning basic biology and translational medicine using mouse models and patient samples, tackles complex questions with profound implications for human health. Projects are available
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within the Department of Radiology. The candidate will have the opportunity to work on “big data” studies in health and diseases, including schizophrenia, psychosis, and Alzheimer’s disease. We collaborate