36 parallel-processing-bioinformatics-"Prof" Postdoctoral research jobs at Technical University of Munich in Germany
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Postdoctoral Positions in Applied and Numerical Analysis Technical University of Munich (TUM) Chair of Applied and Numerical Analysis – Prof. Massimo Fornasier The Chair of Applied and Numerical Analysis
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to 5 and more years. Requirements: • You have a PhD degree (or postgraduate degree MSc) in a computational discipline, preferably with significant experience in Bioinformatics or Computational Biology
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24.06.2025, Wissenschaftliches Personal The Semiconductor Nanostructures and Quantum Systems (SNQS) group at the Walter Schottky Institute of the Technical University of Munich (Prof. J. J. Finley
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world. About the position We invite applications for a 2-year Postdoctoral Researcher position starting in January 2026, supervised by Dr. Judit Lecina-Diaz and Prof. Rupert Seidl. The successful
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the collection and processing of personal data as part of your application: https://portal.mytum.de/kompass/datenschutz/Bewerbung/. By submitting your application, you confirm that you have read and understood
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19.07.2022, Wissenschaftliches Personal The Machine Learning and Information Processing group at TUM works in the intersection of machine learning and signal/information processing with a current
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advisor, and transcript records for your undergraduate and graduate degrees. Applications will be accepted until a suitable candidate is found. Neuroengineering Materials Lab PI: Prof. Kristen Kozielski
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via email to applications@mirmi.tum.de quoting “Postdoc Position in Dexterous End-Effectors for 6G Tactile Tele-surgery” in the e-mail subject line. The position will be filled as soon as possible and
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detection, segmentation, and quantification of diseases such as cancer, the generation of novel representations of pathology data for further processing, or the discovery of virtual biomarkers for patients
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by Prof. Mathias O. Senge (Hans Fischer Senior Fellow, TUM and Chair of Organic Chemistry, School of Chemistry, Trinity College Dublin), Prof. Johannes Barth (Molecular Nanoscience and Chemical Physics