Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Listed
-
Employer
-
Field
-
Company description The Lab for NanoBiology (Prof. Dedecker) is an interdisciplinary research group focused on the study and visualization of molecular processes occurring in biosystems. We combine
-
Directed Energy Deposition (DED) process for metallic components. The PhD candidate will focus on edge computing and the application of AI for data analysis and for identifying correlations with ground truth
-
(FSTM) at the University of Luxembourg contributes multidisciplinary expertise in the fields of Mathematics, Physics, Engineering, Computer Science, Life Sciences and Medicine. Through its dual mission
-
More info on the PhD project The TOBI lab (Translational Onco-genomics and Bio-Informatics) has an open position for a highly motivated biomedical researcher with expertise and interest in
-
the verbalization and automatic detection of emotions across languages’. In this project, you will investigate and compare emotional language use in different languages using methods from computational linguistics
-
into their workflows. You will benchmark the supports, MEMS devices and developed codes on known multiphased reference samples. The TEM will be done at EMAT (University of Antwerp) under guidance of Prof. Dr. Joke
-
heterogeneity by migrant background, thereby enabling more accurate projections of disease dynamics and disease burden in different segments of the population. You will join the DynaMIGs-team, coordinated by prof
-
efficient than digital computer and previous experimental implementations. This work is both experimental, numerical and theoretical in nature. You will be selected by the Applied Physics research group
-
diverse academic backgrounds to contribute to our projects in areas such as: Network Security, Information Assurance, Model-driven Security, Cloud Computing, Cryptography, Satellite Systems, Vehicular
-
Project description We are a highly motivated international team of researchers at the Molecular Neurogenomics group (Jordanova Lab) and the Computational Neurobiology group (Malysheva Lab