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Modeling of mosquito disease vectors to support genetics-based control programs

The Marshall Lab (https://www.marshalllab.com/) at the UC Berkeley School of Public Health is seeking to hire a postdoctoral scholar to work on mathematical and ecological aspects of mosquito vectors of malaria, dengue and other mosquito-borne diseases, with particular interest in genetics-based control strategies. The position is initially for one year, with the possibility of extension, and is available mid-2021. Salary is commensurate with experience, and full benefits are included.

The successful candidate will work on exciting collaborative projects with a consortium of mathematical modelers, molecular biologists, ecologists and epidemiologists, mostly throughout the University of California system. Molecular biology labs that we collaborate with include the Akbari Lab (https://www.akbarilab.com/), Bier Lab (http://bierlab.weebly.com/) and Gantz Lab (http://www.gantzlab.org/) at UCSD, and the James Lab at UC Irvine. Ecology labs that we collaborate with include the Vector Genetics Lab (https://vectorgeneticslab.ucdavis.edu/) at UC Davis and the Mosquito Control Lab at QIMR Berghofer in Australia. We also collaborate with TIGS-UCSD (https://tigs.ucsd.edu/) and the Debug Project (https://debug.com/) at Verily Life Sciences (https://verily.com/), and serve as modeling lead for the UC Irvine Malaria Initiative (https://ucimi.org/).

Tasks that we are seeking help with include:

  • Developing methods to infer mosquito movement patterns and demography from landscape genomic data,
  • Informing mosquito monitoring and surveillance protocols to assess intervention safety and efficacy,
  • Contributing to development of our modeling framework, the Mosquito Gene Drive Explorer (MGDrivE) (https://marshalllab.github.io/MGDrivE/), &
  • Mentoring PhD, Masters and undergraduate students.

An ideal candidate will have:

  • A strong background in applied mathematics, statistics and/or computer science,
  • Experience with population genetics, genomics or ecological and epidemiological modeling,
  • An interest in mosquitoes and/or mosquito-borne diseases, &
  • An interest in mentoring students and promoting diversity, equity and inclusion in research.

If you are interested in the position, please send: i) your CV, including a list of publications and the names and email addresses of three potential referees, ii) PDFs of your two most significant publications or manuscripts to date, and iii) a cover letter describing your research interests and motivations for joining our lab to John Marshall at john.marshall@berkeley.edu. Inquiries are also welcome. Additional information about the research in our lab can be found at https://www.marshalllab.com/. The position will remain open until filled. The first review date will be May 21st 2021.

UC Berkeley has large and vibrant public health, ecology and computational biology communities spanning the School of Public Health, the Department of Integrative Biology, the Department of Environmental Science, Policy and Management, the Center for Computational Biology, the Innovative Genomics Institute, and more. UC Berkeley offers competitive salaries, excellent benefits and is an equal opportunity employer. The City of Berkeley and the surrounding San Francisco Bay Area is known for its progressive values, vibrant social and cultural scene, and beautiful surrounding environment.

Type
Postdoc
Institution
University of California, Berkeley
City
Berkeley
Country
United States
Closing date
June 14th, 2021
Posted on
March 17th, 2021 04:29
Last updated
May 4th, 2021 21:37
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