Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Listed
-
Category
-
Program
-
Field
-
General description of the DDLS Fellows programme Data-driven life science (DDLS) uses data, computational methods and artificial intelligence to study biological systems and processes at all levels
-
phase where we are developing our working methods together. As an employee within Support services, you will contribute to KTH’s mission to research, educate and create societal benefits, and at the same
-
, computer science or a related subject the employer considers of relevance to the position. Experience (3+ years) in working with advanced bioinformatics analyses of omics data from high throughput
-
project to study genetic regulatory variation and its link to molecular, cellular and organismal phenotypes using a systems genetics approach. The project is fully computational, and potential approaches
-
these questions through an interdisciplinary lens, with a strong focus on mathematical and computational methods closely connected to evolutionary theory and biological data. Read more about our research themes and
-
information about us, please visit: the Department of Biochemistry and Biophysics . About the DDLS PhD student program Data-driven life science (DDLS) uses data, computational methods and artificial
-
, molecular biology, computer science or related subjects the employer considers of relevance to the position Experience (3+ years) in working with advanced bioinformatics analyses of omics data from high
-
tasks include development of adequate single-molecule labeling strategies, optimized use of high-precision MINFLUX microscopy, and establishing methods for data precision analysis. What we offer A
-
universities. Data-driven life science (DDLS) uses data, computational methods and artificial intelligence to study biological systems and processes at all levels, from molecular structures and cellular
-
other experts within the Support for Computational Resources unit at NBIS and related organisations, notably SciLifeLab, National Academic Infrastructure for Supercomputing in Sweden (NAISS), and EuroHPC