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PhD position - Modelling the emergence of information transfer in prebiotic self-replicating systems
disciplines, from classical disciplines such as mathematics, astronomy and mechanical engineering as well as interdisciplinary fields, such as artificial intelligence, pharmacy and evolutionary life sciences
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PhD: Adaptive social flexibility – a powerful mechanism to cope with a rapidly changing world (V25.0210) « Back to the overview Job description The Groningen Institute for Evolutionary Life Sciences
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science and engineering disciplines, from classical disciplines such as mathematics, astronomy and mechanical engineering, to interdisciplinary fields such as artificial intelligence, pharmacy and
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mechanism to cope with a rapidly changing world”, with the Seychelles warbler (Acrocephalus sechellensis) as a model system. The project is coordinated by Prof. Jan Komdeur (see: https://research.rug.nl/en
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targeted: i) chiral symmetry breaking; ii) chiral amplification. What is the mechanism that creates symmetry breaking at the molecular level? How can a tiny chiral bias (i.e., preference for one handedness
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a recent Master’s degree in Applied Mathematics, Mechanical Engineering, Electrical Engineering, or another relevant field, with specialization in systems and control theory. Have a strong background
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fundamental research in systems and control theory. Have a recent Master’s degree in Applied Mathematics, Mechanical Engineering, Electrical Engineering, or another relevant field, with specialization in
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disciplines such as mathematics, astronomy and mechanical engineering, to interdisciplinary fields such as artificial intelligence, pharmacy and nanoscience. Our community has an open and informal character
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Technology) Dr Riemer Vegter (YAG, UMCG, Assistant Professor in Human Movement Sciences) Prof. Martijn Wieling (Faculty of Arts, Professor of Groningen Language and Culture) Prof. Han Houdijk (UMCG, Professor
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approach Supervisors Dr Defne Abur (YAG, Faculty of Arts, Assistant Professor of Speech and Speech Technology) Dr Riemer Vegter (YAG, UMCG, Assistant Professor in Human Movement Sciences) Prof. Martijn