Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Listed
-
Category
-
Program
-
Employer
-
Field
-
focusing on infectious and non-communicable diseases, environment, society and health as well as health systems and interventions. The Department of Medical Parasitology and Infection Biology (MPI
-
at ETH Zurich and associated with the ETH AI Center. We are an interdisciplinary group at the intersection of chemistry and computer science. Our mission is to accelerate chemical discovery using digital
-
Required Qualifications: A Master's degree (MSc) in geodesy, hydrology, geosciences, geophysics, computer science, physics, or a closely related discipline A strong foundation in mathematics, physics, data
-
is set to begin on July 1st, 2025, with flexibility regarding the start date. Profile We are looking for candidates with the following qualifications: A master’s degree preferably in Computer Science
-
knowledge and technology from research to Swiss machine, electrical and metal industries. The research group “Design for New Technologies” at inspire offers in collaboration with the Product Development Group
-
, genomics, computational biology, bioinformatics, animal sciences or disciplines related to the PhD position. Affinity to computational genomics, bioinformatics or statistics is a pre-requisite. The writing
-
, computer engineering and/or computer science towards producing relevant and impactful health-monitoring mobile/wearable solutions, then please apply. The research will be highly collaborative; you should be
-
the SVT course programme Contributing to the operation of the group and the Institute Profile You ideally have a Master’s degree in computer science, artificial intelligence, transportation engineering, or
-
. You'll work at the exciting intersection of experimental materials science and materials informatics, collaborating with CSEM and EPFL in a Swiss National Science Foundation (SNF) Bridge Project. Your
-
background Are you ready to dive into Materials Science? We are looking for a PhD candidate at the Laboratory of Metal Physics and Technology (LMPT) to explore the relationship between the nanoscale