Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Welfare. FIMM is part of the Nordic EMBL Partnership for Molecular Medicine, composed of the European Molecular Biology Laboratory (EMBL) and the centres for molecular medicine in Norway, Sweden and Denmark
-
). We are seeking a highly motivated researcher to join our team. We use a wide range of molecular, cellular, transcriptomic, and advanced imaging techniques, in combination with ex vivo and in vivo
-
Research Programme, which belongs to the Faculty of Biological and Environmental Sciences, and it is located in Viikki campus, ten kilometres from the Helsinki city centre. The appointee will work as a part
-
the broader context of U.S.–China technological rivalry. The project contributes to international political economy, digital governance, and security studies. The successful candidate will lead a work package
-
use Finland-wide remote sensing resources from one of the consortium members, Finnish Geospatial Research Institute to monitor tree growth in Finland and combine this information with whole genome
-
of tomorrow and creating novel solutions to major global challenges. Our community is made up of 13 000 students, 400 professors and close to 4 500 other faculty and staff working on our dynamic campus in Espoo
-
researcher will work in the research group of Professor Klaus Nordhausen in the project “Signal recovery in noisy spatial data”. The research group develops modern and efficient multivariate statistical
-
, starting preferably by October 1st, 2025 but a later starting date is also negotiable. There will be a trial period of six months in the beginning of the employment. The postdoctoral researcher will work in
-
physics. Our experimental responsibilities include trigger algorithms and performance, detector calibration, and jet energy corrections. The two appointed candidates will work within the research project
-
. The Postdoctoral Researcher will be a full-time contract for the maximum duration of 2 years. Position description The successful candidate will work within the research project “Structural correctness in