Job Watch

Fall Creek Farm & Nursery: Molecular Lab Research Lead

New Scientist - Bioinformatics - Tue, 2024-03-19 20:00
Fall Creek Farm & Nursery: Fall Creek is creating a world with better blueberries through its friendly and collaborative team spread across the globe. To help us accomplish t... Lowell, Oregon
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CEDARS-SINAI: Research Associate II - Knott Lab - Center for Bioinformatics and Functional Genomics

New Scientist - Bioinformatics - Tue, 2024-03-19 20:00
CEDARS-SINAI: Join Dr. Simon Knott and his research group as a Research Associate II! The goal of the Knott Laboratory is to develop cancer treatment strategies... Beverly Hills, California
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AbbVie: Sr. Scientist, Oncology Bioinformatics

New Scientist - Bioinformatics - Tue, 2024-03-19 20:00
AbbVie: The Genomic Research Center Oncology Bioinformatics group at AbbVie Bay Area is seeking a highly motivated computational biologist to play an inte... South San Francisco, California
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AbbVie: Sr. Scientist I, Systems Biology, Bioinformatics

New Scientist - Bioinformatics - Tue, 2024-03-19 20:00
AbbVie: AbbVie's Genomic Research Center (GRC) is seeking a highly-qualified Systems Biology scientist to join the Bioinformatics Genomic Sciences team at... North Chicago, Illinois
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AbbVie: Senior Scientist II, Bioinformatics - Omics Emerging Technology

New Scientist - Bioinformatics - Tue, 2024-03-19 20:00
AbbVie: AbbVie's Genomic Research Center (GRC) is seeking a highly qualified bioinformatics scientist to join the Emerging Technology (ET) Group within th... North Chicago, Illinois
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AbbVie: 2024 Bioinformatics Engineer Intern

New Scientist - Bioinformatics - Tue, 2024-03-19 20:00
AbbVie: About AbbVie AbbVie's mission is to discover and deliver innovative medicines that solve serious health issues today and address the medical chall... North Chicago, Illinois
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George Washington University: Bioinformatics Specialist I

New Scientist - Bioinformatics - Tue, 2024-03-19 20:00
George Washington University: I. DEPARTMENT INFORMATION Job Description Summary: Founded in 1824, the GW School of Medicine and Health Sciences (SMHS) is the 11th oldest medical... Washington, Washington DC
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New Approaches for Measuring Brain Changes Across Longer Timespans (R21 Clinical Trial Optional)

Funding Opportunity PAR-24-161 from the NIH Guide for Grants and Contracts. The purpose of this funding opportunity is to encourage multidisciplinary investigators to submit applications developing exploratory, highly novel new approaches, or innovative applications of existing approaches to measure brain activity, connectivity, genomics, or other aspects across the age spectrum of neurodevelopment. The overarching goal is to extend our understanding of brain development and aging, including studies of the neurodevelopmental origins of later health and disease, by improving repeated measures across longer epochs of the lifespan to better predict outcomes at later ages. . Research can include healthy human participants of any age, specific clinical groups such those with cognitive, motor, or affective regulation challenges, and/or animal research on these domains of function. The studies can focus on longitudinal neuroanatomical or functional changes at any level, including genetics/genomics, single cells, connectomics, neural population activity patterns, and others. This funding opportunity is intended to encourage technological and conceptual innovation through this high risk, high reward funding mechanism to develop highly innovative ideas that either lack preliminary data or need additional preliminary data

New Approaches for Measuring Brain Changes Across Longer Timespans (R01 Clinical Trial Optional)

Funding Opportunity PAR-24-160 from the NIH Guide for Grants and Contracts. The purpose of this funding opportunity is to encourage multidisciplinary investigators to develop new approaches or apply existing approaches in novel ways to measure brain activity, connectivity, genomics, or other aspects across the age spectrum of neurodevelopment. The overarching goal is to extend our understanding of brain development and aging, including studies of the neurodevelopmental origins of later health and disease. Research can include healthy human participants of any age, specific clinical groups such as those with cognitive, motor, or affective regulation challenges, and/or animal research on these domains of function. The studies can focus on longitudinal neuroanatomical or functional changes at any level, including genetics/genomics, single cells, connectomics, neural population activity patterns, and others. This funding opportunity is intended to encourage technological and conceptual innovation to improve repeated measures across longer epochs of the lifespan, to better predict outcomes at later ages.

BRAIN Initiative: Preclinical Proof of Concept for Novel Recording and Modulation Technologies in the Human CNS (R18 - Clinical Trial Not Allowed)

Funding Opportunity RFA-NS-24-031 from the NIH Guide for Grants and Contracts. Awarded activities will facilitate the translation of novel recording and modulation technologies that can be used to treat and/or diagnose central nervous system (CNS) diseases and disorders and to better understand the human CNS, from proof of concept up to the stage of readiness for first in human (FIH) studies. Technologies may incorporate any signal modality (e.g., electrical, optical, magnetic, acoustic) or a combination thereof. Diverse team-based applications that integrate appropriate domains of expertise are encouraged.

NIH Directors New Innovator Award Program (DP2 Clinical Trial Optional)

Funding Opportunity RFA-RM-24-003 from the NIH Guide for Grants and Contracts. The NIH Directors New Innovator Award Program supports early stage investigators of exceptional creativity who propose bold and highly innovative research projects with the potential to produce a major impact on broad, important areas relevant to the mission of NIH. For the program to support the best possible researchers and research, applications are sought which reflect the full diversity of the research workforce. To support innovative and novel research across the vast NIH mission, individuals from diverse backgrounds (including those from underrepresented groups; see Notice of NIHs Interest in Diversity) and from the full spectrum of eligible institutions in all geographic locations are encouraged to apply to this Notice of Funding Opportunity. Applications in all topics relevant to the broad mission of NIH are welcome, including, but not limited to, behavioral, social, biomedical, applied, and formal sciences and topics that may involve basic, translational, or clinical research. The NIH Director's New Innovator Award Program complements other ongoing efforts by NIH and its Institutes and Centers to fund early stage investigators. The NIH Directors New Innovator Award Program is a component of the High-Risk, High-Reward Research (HRHR) Program of the NIH Common Fund.

NIH Directors Transformative Research Awards (R01 Clinical Trial Optional)

Funding Opportunity RFA-RM-24-004 from the NIH Guide for Grants and Contracts. The NIH Directors Transformative Research Award Program supports individual scientists or groups of scientists proposing bold, groundbreaking, exceptionally innovative, original, and/or unconventional research with the potential to create new scientific paradigms, establish entirely new and improved clinical approaches, or develop transformative technologies. To support innovative and novel research across the vast NIH mission, individuals from diverse backgrounds (including those from underrepresented groups; see Notice of NIHs Interest in Diversity) and from the full spectrum of eligible institutions in all geographic locations are encouraged to apply to this Notice of Funding Opportunity. Applications in all topics relevant to the broad mission of NIH are welcome in all topic areas relevant to the broad mission of NIH, including, but not limited to, behavioral, social, biomedical, applied, and formal sciences and topics that may involve basic, translational, or clinical research. No preliminary data are required. Projects must clearly demonstrate, based on the strength of the logic, a compelling potential to produce a major impact in a broad area of relevance to the NIH. The NIH Directors Transformative Research Award is a component of the High-Risk, High-Reward Research (HRHR) Program of the NIH Common Fund. Towards the objective of funding the best possible science, the Office of Strategic Coordination and the Center for Scientific Review are piloting a process for initial peer review of applications received in response to this FOA in which the identity of the investigators and institutions are withheld until the last phase of review. Instructions for anonymizing components of the application are given in Section IV and must be carefully followed. A description of the review process is given in Section V.

BRAIN Initiative: Data Archives for the BRAIN Initiative (R24 Clinical Trial Optional)

Funding Opportunity RFA-MH-25-110 from the NIH Guide for Grants and Contracts. This Notice of Funding Opportunity (NOFO) solicits applications to develop web-accessible data archives to capture, store, and curate data related to BRAIN Initiative activities. The data archives will work with the research community to incorporate tools that allow users to analyze and visualize the data, but the creation of such tools is not part of this NOFO. The data archives will use appropriate standards to describe the data, but the creation of such standards is not part of this NOFO. A goal of this program is to advance research by creating a community resource data archive with appropriate standards and summary information that is broadly available and accessible to the research community for furthering research.

NIH Directors Early Independence Awards (DP5 Clinical Trial Optional)

Funding Opportunity RFA-RM-24-005 from the NIH Guide for Grants and Contracts. The NIH Director's Early Independence Award supports rigorous and promising junior investigators who wish to pursue independent research soon after completion of their terminal doctoral degree or post-graduate clinical training, thereby forgoing the traditional post-doctoral training period and accelerating their entry into an independent research career. For the program to support the best possible researchers and research, applications are sought which reflect the full diversity of the research workforce. To support innovative and novel research across the vast NIH mission, individuals from diverse backgrounds (including those from underrepresented groups; see Notice of NIHs Interest in Diversity) and from the full spectrum of eligible institutions in all geographic locations are encouraged to apply to this Notice of Funding Opportunity. In addition, applications in all topics relevant to the broad mission of NIH are welcome, including, but not limited to, topics in the behavioral, social, biomedical, applied, and formal sciences and topics that may involve basic, translational, or clinical research. The NIH Director's Early Independence Award is a component of the High-Risk, High-Reward Research program of the NIH Common Fund.

BRAIN Initiative: Clinical Studies to Advance Next-Generation Devices for Recording and Modulation in the Human Central Nervous System (UH3 Clinical Trial Optional)

Funding Opportunity RFA-NS-24-017 from the NIH Guide for Grants and Contracts. Reissue: RFA-NS-21-024: The purpose of this Funding Opportunity Announcement (FOA) is to encourage investigators to pursue a small clinical trial to obtain critical information necessary to advance recording and/or stimulating devices to treat central nervous system disorders and better understand the human brain (e.g., Early Feasibility Study). Clinical studies supported may consist of acute or short-term procedures that are deemed Non-Significant Risk (NSR) by an Institutional Review Board (IRB), or Significant Risk (SR) studies that require an Investigational Device Exemption (IDE) from the FDA, such as chronic implants. The clinical trial should provide data to answer key questions about the function or final design of a device. This final device design may require most, if not all, of the non-clinical testing on the path to more advanced clinical trials and market approval. The clinical trial is expected to provide information that cannot be practically obtained through additional non-clinical assessments (e.g., bench top or animal studies) due to the novelty of the device or its intended use. Activities supported by this Funding Opportunity include a small clinical trial to answer key questions about the function or final design of a device. As part of the BRAIN Initiative, NIH has initiated a Public-Private Partnership Program (BRAIN PPP) that includes agreements (Memoranda of Understanding, MOU) with a number of device manufacturers willing to make such devices available, including devices and capabilities not yet market approved but appropriate for clinical research. In general it is expected that the devices' existing safety and utility data will be sufficient to enable new IRB NSR or FDA IDE approval without need for significant additional non-clinical data. For more information on the BRAIN PPP, see http://braininitiative.nih.gov/BRAIN_PPP/index.htm

CEDARS-SINAI: Research Associate II - Knott Lab - Center for Bioinformatics and Functional Genomics

New Scientist - Bioinformatics - Mon, 2024-03-18 20:00
CEDARS-SINAI: Join Dr. Simon Knott and his research group as a Research Associate II! The goal of the Knott Laboratory is to develop cancer treatment strategies... Beverly Hills, California
Categories: Job Watch

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