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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...
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July 9th 2025; interview of shortlisted candidate to occur July 17th- 18th. Informal enquiries can be directed to mcelherm@tcd.ie (Dr Matt McElheron; computational biology lead) and nbourke@tcd.ie (Prof
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to the online application process should be referred to recruitment@ucc.ie quoting the job-title and project name. Candidates should apply, in confidence, before 12 noon (Irish Local Time) on Friday 27th June
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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
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will contribute to our ability to understand and predict this critical component of ecosystem function. You will work within group spanning ecological science, engineering, and computer science methods
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into University of Galway’s community. Living allowance (Stipend): €25,000 per annum [tax-exempt scholarship award]. Computer equipment and funding for travel (e.g. to conferences) as well as attendance
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risk. These studentships are ideal for candidates with a strong background in computational biology, bioinformatics, population genetics, and statistical genetics and an exceptional interest in
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eighteenth centuries at the Bibliothèque Sainte-Geneviève in Paris. The successful candidate will be enrolled in the Structured PhD Programme in the Department of Early Irish, Maynooth University. The award
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focused role, where you will conduct a specified programme of research supported by research training and development under the supervision and direction of a Principal Investigator. The primary purpose
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. As exposure to these risk factors begins 20-40 years before dementia onset, interventions must be implemented in mid-life. However, the indicators of the disease process in mid-life are poorly