111 computer-science-programming-languages-"the"-"FEMTO-ST-institute"-"O" positions at Nature Careers in Germany
Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
commitment is expected in the English-taught BSc program “Biomedical Sciences” and MSc "Integrative Neuroscience". We accompany newly appointed faculty members with appropriate development offers, and also
-
, or similar. You have laboratory experience and an interest in developing your bioinformatic skills. You have very good written and oral communication skills in English. Requirements: The position
-
of epithelial plasticity in kidney repair to contribute to the preparation of scientific publications, grant applications and presentations to contribute to teaching in Biomedical Sciences (Master programme
-
Training Group (RTG) “Activation of anti-Microbial Effectors (ACME)” (coordinator: Dirk Schlüter, Hannover) funded by the German Research Foundation. The central aim of the program is to give highly
-
fields (e. g. physics, computer science, electrical/electronic engineering, chemistry etc.). The knowledge of Python, C or other programming languages in use for accelerator facilities is advantageous. We
-
to the success of the whole institution. At the Faculty of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Institute of Communication Technology, the Deutsche Telekom Chair of Communication Networks offers a position under
-
, giving rise to complex lesions. GSI is working on the quantification of such complex lesions in particular in dependence on radiation type. Within this program, the GSI biophysics department offers a PhD
-
: Experience in molecular/cell biology techniques AND basic programming skills (Python or R) • For computational candidates: Strong programming skills AND interest in cancer biol-ogy/immunology • Ability
-
candidates (prior association [including guest contracts] of a candidate fellow with the MDC or other German research organization is compatible with application to the program but cannot exceed 12 months
-
evolution, molecular microbiology, synthetic communities, and computational biology. The project aims to pioneer a novel form of phage therapy by engineering prophages—phages integrated into bacterial genomes