53 computational-biology-physics-training Postdoctoral positions at Technical University of Munich
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02.07.2025, Wissenschaftliches Personal The Professorship of Energy Management Technologies at TUM’s School of Engineering and Design is looking for a Postdoc (f/m/d) in Energy Informatics. You are
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smart grid). While there has been tremendous progress in formal verification of cyber-physical systems, existing approaches still require expert knowledge. The main goal of this project is to develop
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of targeted therapies. Analyzing high-dimensional single-cell data has its own statistical and computational challenges, and standard tools often cannot be applied. The purpose of the position and goal
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18.09.2024, Wissenschaftliches Personal We have several 𝐏𝐡𝐃 & 𝐏𝐨𝐬𝐭𝐃𝐨𝐜 𝐨𝐩𝐞𝐧𝐢𝐧𝐠𝐬 in our Visual Computing & AI Lab in Munich! Topics have a strong focus on GenAI, including 3DGs
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interactive and international environment. Numerous possibilities for further training in the sciences and beyond. Website of the Chair of Plant Systems Biology at TUM: http://sysbiol.wzw.tum.de Application We
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” are ready to be exploited. • You will also be involved in the training of students. Your qualifications and skills: • You have a PhD or equivalent degree in biology, agri-cultural biology or any related field
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PhD degree in biology, physics or a related discipline. You have experience in quantitative biology, experimental soft matter, or experimental biophysics. You enjoy working in interdisciplinary and
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03.02.2023, Wissenschaftliches Personal Postdoc Position (m/f/d, TV-L E 12 position, for 15 months, extension possible depending on funding) in “Surface Chemical Physics and Molecular Nanoscience
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Institute (https://www.mdsi.tum.de/). The Position Plan, develop and test novel computational models for the analysis of digital pathology image data. Collaborate with pathologists and other domain experts
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the brain and nervous system. Our goal is to contribute to neurotechnologies that are minimally invasive, and possibly implanted with no surgical intervention. Specifically, we develop wireless nanoelectrodes