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Graduates of the Graduate School for Geoinformatics will apply and develop methods for computer-supported solutions to spatially referenced problems (global, regional, local). They receive specialised
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methods of linguistic data collection and analysis and can therefore use these methods in a critical and reflective way. All doctoral students will receive individual supervision from two faculty members
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of biomolecules which can only be successfully tackled by employing a variety of different theoretical methods. In this respect, this joint graduate college brings together the expertise in analytical theory from
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(one-time 45-60 minutes) B. Basic Principles seminars (one-time 45-60 minutes) and respective Advanced Method courses (hands-on; one- to two-day courses) such as: Static and perfusion-based ex vivo
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epidemiological methods and statistics equivalent to that which may be gained in a degree programme like MSE, MSc Epidemiology, MPH, or MSAE. In individual cases, when such a formal degree is lacking, successfully
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methods, such as statistical methods and methods for data collection. The GSBS provides coursework in the respective fields. Interdisciplinary courses are taught by lecturers from different fields and
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from outside the University of Stuttgart Can attend courses and seminars specially designed for simulation technology Are able to exchange technical and methodical information Are integrated
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. The project focuses on developing information theory, coding schemes, and other algorithmic methods for DNA data storage. Here is a video on the topic: https://www.bbc.com/future/article/20151122-this-is-how
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of the doctoral project is positively evaluated after the first two years. CMS’s inter-disciplinary team is performing research in the broad field of computational methods for the built environment. Particular