Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Listed
-
Category
-
Employer
-
Field
-
have the opportunity to develop their research, both individually and as part of a team of ambitious scholars. PhD students at Maynooth University are enrolled in a structured PhD programme. This
-
Dublin, Edinburgh, Cambridge, Oxford universities, and Imperial College London, aims to establish sensitive biomarkers of very early Alzheimer’s disease (AD) process. Professors Lorina Naci co-leads
-
knowledge of human brain function and to use this knowledge to help people with psychiatric and neurological disorders. Our research integrates multimodal brain imaging techniques with novel neuromodulation
-
of Galway’s community. Living allowance (Stipend): €25,000 per annum [tax-exempt scholarship award] over four years. Computer equipment and funding for travel (e.g. to conferences), as well as attendance
-
educator resources, paying particular focus to the development of enterprise skills in the computing and software development context. Expected outcomes include stronger industry-academia collaboration
-
of protective immunity. This project will provide new insights into mechanisms of immunity deployed against this notorious human pathogen. Emerging evidence suggests that a critical bottleneck that has faced
-
Development. In choosing Cork University Business School, you will be supported in your research, while based in the heart of the city of Cork , Ireland. Program Highlights: Enhanced Stipend: Enhanced fully
-
Trinity College Dublin, School of Mathematics Position ID: 1697 -PHD [#26720] Position Title: Position Type: Academic admissions Position Location: Dublin, Dublin D02 PN40, Ireland [map ] Subject Area: Combinatorial algebraic geometry Appl Deadline: (posted 2025/07/02, listed until...
-
hosted at a different university but trained through a single, joint programme. Candidates may apply for one, two or all three positions via a common application (details below). Why join Noise 2050? 4
-
be based in the School of Computer Science and Statistics at Trinity College Dublin, Ireland and will be funded under the Science Foundation Ireland Investigators award project. The researcher will