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Description The PhD student will join the T4-SECRET team (https://igdr.univ-rennes.fr/en/t4-secret-group-kevin-mace ), a young and dynamic group specialised in the structural and mechanistic study of Type IV
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Feb 2026 Is the job funded through the EU Research Framework Programme? Not funded by a EU programme Is the Job related to staff position within a Research Infrastructure? No Offer Description This PhD
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inference. We are looking for a PhD student with a strong interest for evolutionary processes and good computational skills. Programming experience is a prerequisite, and experience using the programming
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equipment, particularly in imaging and electron microscopy, image analysis, and bioinformatics. The team is composed of five people. The thesis will be carried out as part of a collaborative ANR project
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of environmental adaptation processes. These interactions unfold simultaneously in space and time and exhibit non-linear patterns of change that require new ways of thinking about and modelling the urban condition
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to develop chiral metal nanoclusters, understand their chirality at the atomic level through a combination of advanced spectroscopic techniques and theoretical simulations, and apply them to relevant processes
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with the CNRS and the University of Montpellier. It hosts around 220 staff members and is organized into three departments. The PhD student will join the team “Epigenetic Chromatin Regulation”, under
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good communication skills (English required), strong motivation, curiosity, and autonomy. Knowledge of solid-state chemistry and/or Li-ion batteries, as well as an appetite for processes, including
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available for onsite translation, how the axonal and dendritic RNA landscapes are locally organized and regulated to integrate external local signals is to date unclear. The objective of the PhD project will
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the two doctoral students. This project will thus allow for further research, something that cannot be achieved solely on a national scale. USP will benefit from the CNRS's expertise on the processes