24 Environment-"National-Institutes-of-Health" Postdoctoral research jobs at Stanford University
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National Institutes of Health-funded project on the health impacts of natural hazards, with a focus on population health in low- and middle-income countries. The Postdoctoral Research Fellow will join an
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The Climate and Energy Policy Program (CEPP) of Stanford’s Woods Institute for the Environment and the Bits & Watts Initiative of Stanford’s Precourt Institute for Energy invite applications for a
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dynamic environment offering varied learning opportunities. Stanford University is committed to increasing the diversity of its workforce. It welcomes applications from women, members of minority groups
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program provides an enabling environment for fellows to conceptualize, develop, and lead independent research initiatives. The postdoctoral fellowship is anchored at Stanford Department of Anesthesiology
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record of scholarly productivity, and the ability to work independently, yet collaboratively, in a multidisciplinary environment with clinicians, computer scientists, and statisticians, are strongly
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toxicants leading to vascular disease, including tobacco, vaping, and air pollution. Through the use of the gene-environment interaction . Major focus will be on a funded project to identify the drivers
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underlying environmental toxicant-induced cardiovascular diseases and gene-environment interactions, with a specific emphasis on identifying modifiers of response to known toxicants leading to vascular
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educational backgrounds (low-income households and disadvantaged educational environments) to apply. Applications will be reviewed starting on February 1, 2024. Applicants who have questions about the position
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the next generation of computational scientists in the rheumatic diseases. Access to Stanford’s scientific community and resources provides an unparalleled environment to perform high-impact translational
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antimicrobial mechanisms in infected tissues. We seek to recruit individuals who are passionate about advancing mechanistic understanding of infection biology and to provide a supportive environment for fellows