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The Institute for Infection Prevention and Control (IPC, Head Prof. Dr. Philipp Henneke) is looking as soon as possible for a Bioinformatician (m/f/d, PhD) with focus on the analysis of large
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of the North Sea. Existing automated detection algorithms will be used to identify seals and porpoises. The results will be used to create seasonal acoustic presence maps, investigate differences in community
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fees and include a tax-free stipend (£19,237 pa. currently), for a period of 3.5 years. The successful candidate will be supervised by Prof. Kurt Debattista and Dr. Thomas Bashford-Rogers
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modular, scalable, and transparent control algorithms suitable for real-time implementation across different vehicle platforms. - Contribute to theoretical developments in stochastic model predictive
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animals, while Prof Durbin's works on computational genomics and large scale genome science, including the development of new algorithms and statistical methods to study genome evolution. Moving forward
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Your Job: Random unitaries are a ubiquitous tool in quantum information and quantum computing, with applications in the characterization of quantum hardware, quantum algorithms, quantum cryptography
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models through specific activation functions. This project will be undertaken in collaboration with Dr Hemanth Saratchandran and Prof Simon Lucey of the Australian Institute for Machine Learning, and
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. You will work under the supervision of Prof. Francisco C. Pereira, Assoc. Prof. Carlos Lima Azevedo (DTU), Dr. Biagio Ciuffo and Dr. Georgios Fontaras (JRC). You will work on research focused
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performance and future potential. The successful candidate will work under the main supervision of Prof. Holger Voos and will be required to perform the following tasks: Carry out the aforementioned research
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structure, and of the force and tidal field that has been shaping the cosmic web. The basic detection algorithms to infer the overall structure of the cosmic web are the various versions of the scale-space