17 parallel-and-distributed-computing-"DIFFER" research jobs at University of Tübingen in Germany
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” (funded by the German Research Foundation, DFG). PhD Researcher in Computational Linguistics (m/f/d, E13 TV-L, 75%) The position begins on 01 October 2025 and ends on 30 June 2029. The position is
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Students Current Students Staff Back Advice and help Computer and IT Staying healthy Communication and media Human Resources Use of rooms Corporate Design Teaching Staff Back Veranstaltungen Förderformate
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in different healthcare domains in our “AI Safety Test Bench” Coordination with our project partners the position is limited to 3 years Your Profile PhD degree in computer science or a related field
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physical and social context, prior interactions, rank differences, and kin relationships. Our goal is to study the importance of different information sources in great ape communicative interactions
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. Particular emphasis is on the role of context in primate communication, such as physical and social context, prior interactions, rank differences, and kin relationships. This project will thereby contribute
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different backgrounds and different experience levels is required. The project offers a cohesive and diverse research environment at the University of Tübingen and a dedicated interdisciplinary project team
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predicts the interactions of the evidentials with different types of speech act and syntactic contexts. The position begins on October 1, 2025 (or shortly after) and will run until June 30, 2029. The ideal
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-canonical questions in a small sample of European languages from different language families (approx. 4 languages, e.g. English, German, Italian, Hungarian). Only applicants that hold a master’s degree (or
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sample of European languages from different language families (approx. 6 languages from 4 families, e.g., English, German, Spanish, Hungarian, Russian, Turkish). Only applicants that hold (or will very
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Southeast Asia) are welcome. Your Future Tasks: Engage in interdisciplinary research focused on mantras and/as sound, and mantras as unequally distributed sounds. Publish your findings in peer-reviewed