Computational Biologist
University of Massachusetts Medical SchoolRole Overview
University of Massachusetts Medical School is hiring a mid-level Computational Biologist. This is a full-time role in Worcester. Full responsibilities, required qualifications, and the apply link are listed in the description below.
Resume Keywords to Include
Make sure these keywords appear in your resume to improve ATS scoring
Sign up free to auto-tailor your resume with all these keywords and get a higher ATS score
Job Description
Overview
The Computational Biologist be part of an interdisciplinary research group combining systems biology, immunology, and human genetics to uncover the mechanisms that drive autoimmune disease. The lab leads large-scale efforts such as the VIGOR family-based vitiligo cohort (bigor.umassmed.edu) and multi-omic studies of lupus and cutaneous autoimmunity, integrating data across molecular, cellular, and clinical scales.
This position will bridge two complementary areas of research:
- Molecular systems immunology, involving the analysis of single-cell and spatial transcriptomic, epigenomic, and proteomic datasets to dissect cell states and communication networks in diseased and healthy tissues.
- Genetic and longitudinal modeling, integrating genomic variation with real-world longitudinal data—including proteomics, wearable device metrics, survey responses, and clinical measures—to build predictive and causal models of disease initiation and progression.
The ideal candidate combines strong computational and statistical skills with a biological curiosity about how genetic and environmental factors jointly shape immune dysregulation.
Responsibilities
Responsibilities
- Process, analyze, and interpret large-scale datasets including bulk and single-cell RNA-seq, ATAC-seq, proteomics, and spatial transcriptomics.
- Develop new analysis methods as needed and as they arise during investigations
- Perform clustering, trajectory inference, and regulatory network reconstruction to define immune cell states and pathways relevant to autoimmune pathogenesis.
- Work closely with clinicians, immunologists, and experimentalists to formulate biologically grounded hypotheses and computational analyses.
- Integrate genetic, molecular, and clinical features to identify mediators linking genotype to phenotype using mediation and causal inference frameworks (e.g., Bayesian networks).
- Combine data from wearable sensors (e.g., Fitbit activity, sleep, heart rate), clinical surveys, and biomarker measurements to model temporal dynamics of disease activity.
- Present findings in lab meetings, consortium calls, and scientific conferences; contribute to manuscripts and grant proposals.
- Generate publication-quality figures and interactive visualizations that communicate complex data intuitively.
Qualifications
Required Qualifications
- Master’s degree in Computational Biology, Bioinformatics, Genetics, Statistics, Physics, Math or a related quantitative field; Ph.D. strongly preferred.
- 1-3 years of related experience
- Strong proficiency in R or Python, statistical modeling, and data visualization.
- Strong understanding of linear models, mixed-effect models, and in general machine learning approaches to complex datasets.
- Experience working in Unix/Linux environments and using HPC or cloud-based computational resources.
Preferred Qualifications
- Background in human genetics or clinical genomics, including genotype imputation, association testing, and fine-mapping.
- Experience with integrative or multi-omic data analysis and familiarity with single-cell and spatial transcriptomic data.
- Knowledge of causal inference, longitudinal modeling, or Bayesian hierarchical modeling.
- Exposure to wearable-device or digital-phenotyping datasets and experience linking such data to molecular or clinical outcomes.
- Understanding of immunology or autoimmune disease biology.
- Familiarity with containerization (Docker/Singularity), workflow management systems (Snakemake, Nextflow), and reproducible-research practices.
Additional Information
#LI-KR1
Frequently Asked Questions
How do I apply for the Computational Biologist position at University of Massachusetts Medical School?
Use the Apply button above to submit your application directly to University of Massachusetts Medical School. Most applications take less than 5 minutes if your resume and contact details are ready, and you'll be routed to the employer's official application system to finish.
Where is the Computational Biologist position at University of Massachusetts Medical School located?
This position is based in Worcester. University of Massachusetts Medical School has not indicated remote or hybrid options for this role, so candidates should plan for on-site work.
What does a Computational Biologist at University of Massachusetts Medical School earn?
University of Massachusetts Medical School has not disclosed a salary range in this posting. Many employers share specifics later in the interview process; you can also ask during a recruiter screen if compensation transparency is important to you.
When was the Computational Biologist role at University of Massachusetts Medical School posted?
This role was posted on May 14, 2026 (32 days ago). It's still listed as actively hiring; we re-confirm openings against the source system multiple times per day and remove closed roles.
AI-powered job search
Get every job scored to your resume
Upload your resume and get jobs ranked, your resume tailored, and employee contacts found automatically.
Get Started FreeNo credit card to start