Applicants must be U.S. citizens, or permanent residents. Individuals with temporary or student visas are not eligible to apply.
Principal Investigator, Neil Bhowmick, PhD, is looking for a T32 Research Fellow to join the team!
When the work you do every single day has a crucial impact on the lives of others, every effort, every detail, and every second matters. This shared culture of happiness, passion, and dedication pulses through Cedars-Sinai, and itβs just one of the many reasons why we rank as one of the top hospitals in the nation by U.S. News & World Report.
Are you ready to be a part of breakthrough research?
Funded by the National Cancer Institute (T32CA240172), the multidisciplinary training program in prostate cancer at Cedars-Sinai Cancer provides exceptionally motivated postdoctoral fellows with scientific knowledge, research training, and professional skills of translational prostate cancer research. The goal of the program is to provide innovative curriculum and mentored research that prepares an elite group of highly motivated fellows to become successful, independent researchers in cancer biology.
As a Research Fellow you will work independently and in close cooperation/consultation with the Principal Investigator and other Research Scientist(s). Daily tasks will include complex and routine laboratory procedures throughout the training period in prostate cancer research. May develop, adapt, and implement new research techniques and protocols, and responsible for the analysis and interpretation of data. May aid in the preparation of grant proposals. Will conduct design experiment assembling data for publications and presentations as author or co-author.
To learn more about Dr. Bhowmick’s work, please visit: https://www.cedars-sinai.edu/research/labs/bhowmick.html
Experience/Education we are looking for:
- U.S. citizenship or U.S. permanent resident status is required
- Doctorate (MD, PhD, VMD, or DDS) in an area directly related to field of research specialization or related.
- Experience working with mice.