Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Post Summary We are seeking outstanding candidates for two fully funded PhD studentships to explore how natural selection has driven global disparities in disease susceptibility—through the powerful
-
at the Siemens 3T scanner at Trinity College Institute of Neuroscience, in Dublin, Ireland. The PhD Project The PhD student’s first objective will be to help conduct the 3rd testing wave of the PREVENT Dublin
-
networks become essential to manage network requests, while maintaining high availability and optimal resource utilization. One PhD studentship is available for work in the area of Digital Twins for optical
-
Post Summary: 4-Year PhD Studentship: Healthcare System Adaptation for Novel Alzheimer's Therapeutics This PhD project invites exploration into how healthcare systems might navigate the emerging
-
Molecular Rheumatology, Trinity Biomedical Sciences Institute, TCD (https://rheumatologytcd.com) is seeking to appoint a PhD student to perform research focused on identifying molecular pathways
-
. To address this, the PhD candidate will develop network models for such trace data with a strong focus on real-world applications. These applications can be developed in collaboration with substantive
-
education, research, and innovation, which has been inspiring generations of thinkers for over 400 years. Post Summary The Lab for Clinical & Integrative Neuroscience (Lab CLINT) aims to advance fundamental
-
for a PhD studentship to investigate the genetic underpinnings of neuropsychiatric disorders using cutting-edge long-read sequencing (LRS) technology. This project aims to generate whole-genome LRS data
-
Post Summary We are pleased to invite applications for two fully funded PhD studentships to work on a project at the interface of synthetic organic chemistry, electrochemistry, and sustainability
-
also of growing interest to industry.Project supervisor: Dr. Eoin Delaney (Trinity College Dublin).Project locations: School of Computer Science and Statistics, Trinity College Dublin.PhD structure