Bioinformatician A/B
Alumni Network Job Board(2 months ago)
About this role
The University of Pennsylvania is seeking multiple motivated bioinformaticians to join the Human Pancreas Analysis Program and Faryabi Lab. The role involves contributing to the advancement of understanding aberrant gene expression regulation through the use of genomic and imaging technologies, and collaborating in a multidisciplinary environment focused on computational and chromatin biology.
Required Skills
- Bioinformatics
- Genomics
- Data Analysis
- Collaboration
- Programming
Qualifications
- Bachelor’s Degree in computational or life sciences
- Master’s Degree in computational or life sciences
About Alumni Network Job Board
upenn.eduThe University of Pennsylvania (Penn) is a private Ivy League research university in Philadelphia offering undergraduate, graduate, and professional programs across schools such as Wharton (business), Penn Medicine, SEAS (engineering), Law, Nursing, and the School of Arts & Sciences. Penn emphasizes interdisciplinary research, innovation, and entrepreneurship, translating scholarship into clinical care, startups, and public policy. Founded in the 18th century with ties to Benjamin Franklin, it maintains a large research enterprise, global partnerships, and a broad alumni network.
View more jobs at Alumni Network Job Board →Apply instantly with AI
Let ApplyBlast auto-apply to jobs like this for you. Save hours on applications and land your dream job faster.
More jobs at Alumni Network Job Board
Similar Jobs
Staff Scientist (Computational - Genomics) - Genetics
Washington University in St. Louis(1 month ago)
Bioinformatician II
Brigham and Women(1 month ago)
Postdoctoral Scholar - Computational-Biology
Penn State University(6 months ago)
Postdoctoral Scholar - Computational-Biology
Penn State University(2 months ago)
Research Associate 2 or 3/Bioinformatician - Functional Genomics
Events/University Recruiting (11 days ago)
Senior Scientist (Computational) - Genetics
Washington University in St. Louis(1 month ago)