Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
JOB PURPOSE: In support of Stanford University’s over 9,000 PhD students and postdoctoral scholars, Stanford Career Education (CareerEd) seeks a talented and committed professional to serve as the
-
prestigious scientific outlets. Advanced oral, written, and quantitative research skills, exhibiting fluency in their area of specialization. Experience working with public agencies, communities, and URM groups
-
projects in the energy domain. Evidence of research productivity and quality via publications in top journals or other prestigious scientific outlets. Advanced oral, written, and quantitative research skills
-
applicant will take a lead role in development and application of models and contribute to a broader portfolio of projects through regular participation in working groups. Candidates must have a PhD in Health
-
interdisciplinary collaborative statistics unit in the Biomedical Informatics Research Division within the Department of Medicine at Stanford University. The mission of Stanford's Quantitative Sciences Unit is to
-
data, and disseminate findings. Independently work with investigators on proposal or grant development. Take the statistical lead on studies. Oversee biostatisticians in the lower levels on data cleaning
-
also work with artificial intelligence tools (e.g., large language models) for research purposes. This is a 2-year position ideal for applicants considering pursuing PhD training in linguistics
-
into individual research teams. Duties include: Design study. Develop and implement protocol for quality control. Create analytic files with detailed documentation. Select appropriate statistical tools
-
technologies. *- Other duties may also be assigned. DESIRED QUALIFICATIONS: Master’s or PhD degree in bioinformatics, computational biology, (bio)statistics, (electrical) engineering or related fields. Fluency
-
across projects and using existing data. * - Other duties may also be assigned DESIRED QUALIFICATIONS: MD/PhD or equivalent with specific prior training in functional neuroimaging trials in psychiatry