Full-Time

AI Engineer

Vision Foundation Model Pretraining

Howard Hughes Medical Institute (HHMI)

Howard Hughes Medical Institute (HHMI)

1,001-5,000 employees

Philanthropy funding basic biomedical research

No salary listed

Ashburn, VA, USA

In Person

Category
AI & Machine Learning (2)
,
Required Skills
Python
Pytorch
Requirements
  • Master's or PhD degree in Computer Science, Applied Mathematics, Computational Neuroscience, or a related field—or an equivalent combination of education and relevant experience.
  • 3+ years of experience training and evaluating deep learning architectures such as Transformers or U-Nets, particularly on image or point cloud data.
  • Strong programming skills in Python, PyTorch, and JAX.
  • Familiarity with computational tools in microscopy and connectomics data (Cellpose, CAVE, Flood Filling Networks, Neuroglancer, Zarr).
  • Familiarity with state of the art (self-supervised) computer vision algorithms (e.g., DINO, Masked Autoencoders, SAM).
  • Experience with ML model deployment, workflow orchestration, and high-throughput data processing and model training.
  • Keen interest to work in a truly interdisciplinary environment and learn about cellular/molecular biology (e.g. transcriptomics) & neuroscience.
Responsibilities
  • Research and explore the model design space for vision foundation models of multi-modal biological microscopy data.
  • Build a self-supervised pre-training pipeline on a large-scale foundational dataset of multi-modal biological microscopy data.
  • Design and execute rigorous experiments to evaluate model performance on a wide distribution of microscopy images and model architectures.
  • Collaborate with interdisciplinary teams, potentially mentor junior engineers, and direct or assist in directing the work of others to meet project goals while advising stakeholders on data strategies and best practices.
  • Deploy models both at Janelia and in the broader scientific community and ensure downstream usability.
Desired Qualifications
  • Javascript skills are a plus.
  • Domain expertise in microscopy image analysis is not necessary, but will be highly valued.
Howard Hughes Medical Institute (HHMI)

Howard Hughes Medical Institute (HHMI)

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Howard Hughes Medical Institute (HHMI) operates as an independent philanthropy that supports basic biomedical scientists and science educators. It funds people rather than specific projects, offering fellowships, grants, and resources to researchers and educators, and provides an adaptable work environment across fields like communications, finance, IT, investments, and law in addition to science. Its approach centers on funding talented individuals and enabling collaboration, rather than directing a single program. This helps scientists conduct experiments, explore ideas, and educate others with the aim of advancing biomedical knowledge and science education. Compared with other funders, HHMI emphasizes investing in people, fostering collaborative and results-driven work, and maintaining flexibility to support long-term impact. The overarching goal is to move science forward by expanding the potential of researchers and educators to make transformative contributions.

Company Size

1,001-5,000

Company Stage

Grant

Total Funding

$1M

Headquarters

Chevy Chase Village, Maryland

Founded

1953

Simplify Jobs

Simplify's Take

What believers are saying

  • AI embeds across scientific process, accelerating life sciences discoveries.
  • Supports MIT tool mapping tumor growth via cell family trees.
  • Grants $2.5 million to UMass Amherst reshaping STEM education.

What critics are saying

  • AI hallucinations invalidate research, damaging credibility in 12-24 months.
  • Anthropic dependency causes lock-in, disruptions in 18-36 months.
  • Talent drains to OpenAI, DeepMind in 12-24 months.

What makes Howard Hughes Medical Institute (HHMI) unique

  • AI@HHMI invests $500 million over 10 years at Janelia Campus.
  • Partners with Anthropic on February 2, 2026, for interpretable AI.
  • David Baker wins 2024 Nobel in Chemistry for protein design.

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Company News

Howard Hughes Medical Institute
Feb 2nd, 2026
HHMI Investigator Karolin Luger Wins 2026 Vilcek Prize

HHMI Investigator Karolin Luger wins 2026 Vilcek Prize. HHMI Investigator Karolin Luger is being honored by the Vilcek Foundation for her research into nucleosomes - the DNA-packaging structures inside cells - that has led to the development of innovative drugs for treating diseases, including cancer. The Vilcek Foundation has awarded HHMI Investigator Karolin Luger of the University of Colorado, Boulder, the $100,000 Vilcek Prize in Biomedical Scienceexternal link, opens in a new tab for her career-long dedication to the study of nucleosomes. Her pioneering research into these repetitive structures that package DNA inside the nucleus and regulate gene expression has contributed to the development of treatments for diseases such as cancer. Presented annually since 2006, the Vilcek Foundation Prizes in Biomedical Science honor immigrants who are leading advancements in biomedical research in the United States. Co-founder Jan Vilcek, whose groundbreaking work led to the development of the lifesaving drug Remicade(R), established the prizes to support distinct ingenuity in scientific inquiry. An HHMI Investigator since 2005, Luger has devoted her career to studying nucleosomes - repeating structures of DNA wrapped around proteins that make up chromatin, which form chromosomes. As a postdoc, Luger and Timothy Richmond at ETH Zürich captured a high-resolution image of chromatin, revealing the nucleosome structure in atomic detail for the first time. The discovery changed how researchers understand the interactions of proteins within the nucleosome, how they are modified, and how this controls gene activity. Many diseases have been found to stem from mutations in the nucleosome, resulting in the development of successful drug treatments, including cancer medicines. Luger continues to build on this original discovery in her labexternal link, opens in a new tab, where she and her team seek to understand the impact of chromatin architecture on genome-related processes. She is a member of the National Academy of Science and the American Academy of Arts & Sciences, and an associate member of EMBO.

Howard Hughes Medical Institute
Apr 5th, 2025
David Liu Awarded Breakthrough Prize

Howard Hughes Medical Institute (HHMI) Investigator David R. Liu was awarded the 2025 Breakthrough Prize in Life Sciences for developing two gene-editing technologies - known as base editing and prime editing - which enable the correction or replacement of virtually any genetic mutation, including those that cause countless human genetic diseases.

Howard Hughes Medical Institute
Dec 12th, 2024
A Local Approach

Dennis McKearin joined HHMI as a Scientific Officer in 2008, and soon K-RITH became his primary focus.

University of Alabama at Birmingham
Oct 9th, 2024
Sun wins a highly competitive, five-year NIH Director's Pioneer award

HHMI announced the launch of the Freeman Hrabowski Scholars program in May 2022.

Loyola Marymount University
Aug 19th, 2024
Grant Is Driving Change in STEM Classrooms

Loyola Marymount University was awarded a $2.5 million Driving Change grant in November 2022 from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute (HHMI) to create lasting culture change on research university campuses by creating a more inclusive learning environment.