Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Listed
-
Category
-
Program
-
Employer
-
Field
-
Contract length : 2 years, renewable twice, max. 6 years Rate : 100% The Department of Computational Biology (DBC ) is internationally renowned for its excellence in research pertaining to the analysis
-
. 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
-
and refactoring source code for computational and data science applications both on the methodological and implementation side or deploying and integrating applications to adequate compute environments
-
include, but are not limited to molecular, cellular and tissue engineering, synthetic biology, systems biology, computational biology, biomaterials, functional genomics, proteomics, metabolomics and
-
member of the School of Basic Sciences, the successful candidate is expected to initiate and develop a creative research program at the forefront of the discipline. Significant start-up resources, research
-
. The ideal assistant studies in the Bachelor's or the Master's program of the Faculty of Business and Economics. In addition, a high level of self-reliance and an efficient attitude to work is expected
-
(master's level or above) or equivalent, in Computer Science, Software Engineering, Computational Science, Physics, Astrophysics, or a related field. Programming Skills: Proven proficiency in programming
-
The School of Life Sciences at EPFL invites applications for a Tenure Track Assistant Professor position in Neuroscience. At EPFL researchers develop and apply innovative technologies to understand
-
80%-100%, Zurich, fixed-term The Chair of Sustainable Construction at ETH Zurich invites applications for a 4-year PhD position within the SNF-funded National Research Programme NRP81 project
-
international campus with world-class infrastructure, including high performance computing. EPFL covers a wide spectrum of science and engineering and offers a fertile environment for research and cooperation