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an interdisciplinary environment Meritorious are: Experience in image analysis, optical measurement methods, or instrument development Experience in clinical research settings Previous authorship or contribution
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circular solutions for products and services with applications in the environment, analysis, food, water, agriculture, medicine, and industrial biotechnology for the production of materials, chemicals, and
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spectrometry or alternatively structural biology. Knowledge in data analysis and statistics. Strong ability to communicate effectively in English, both orally and in writing. Documented experience in scientific
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analysis, image processing, and statistics Excellent command of English, both written and spoken Ability to work both independently and in a clinical research environment Meritorious are: Experience with
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biology methods and bioinformatics methods advanced cell culture, RT-PCR, immunostaining, microscopy, flow cytometry, analysis of single cell and bulk omics sequencing data as well as mathematic modeling
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proteomics Strong skills in quantitative proteomics data analysis using R, as well as knowledge in bioinformatics Solid understanding of mitochondrial functions and cellular metabolism Experience in cell
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, or English, a summary of max 1,000 words must be included, outlining method, theory, and results/analysis. A CV in Swedish or English showing eligibility for PhD studies in Sociology of Law. Degree
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summary of max 1,000 words must be included, outlining the methodology, theory, results/analysis. A CV in English demonstrating eligibility for doctoral studies in Sociology of Law. Degree certificates and
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than Swedish, Danish, Norwegian, or English, a summary of max 1,000 words must be included, outlining the methodology, theory, results/analysis. A CV in English demonstrating eligibility for doctoral
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for children’s and young people’s health and social care. The work duties include: Analysis of how digitalisation affects workload, professional responsibility and the experience of providing ‘good care’, and