16 assistant-professor-computer-science-and-data Postdoctoral positions in Netherlands
Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
. The research carried out at the Faculty of Science is very diverse, ranging from mathematics, information science, astronomy, physics, chemistry and bio-pharmaceutical sciences to biology and environmental
-
, assistant professor, julian.helfenstein@wur.nl . For more information about the procedure, please contact Noorien Abbas, Corporate Recruiter, by email: noorien.abbas@wur.nl Do you want to apply? You can apply
-
application but must be completed and defended no later than November 2025 (position start date is January 2026); PhD in political science, international relations, security studies, computer science, data
-
alignment with the strategic directions of the STS PNRR programme. Scientifically, you will in particular: propose and conduct rigorous research in the field of model-based digital system engineering and
-
. Wilhelm, Assistant Professor in Control of Robotic Systems for Assistance and Rehabilitation, e.wilhelm@rug.nl (please do not use the email addresses above for applications)
-
information, you may contact (please do not use these email addresses for applications): Ellen van der Werff, Associate Professor - Environmental Psychology, ellen.van.der.werff@rug.nl Gabriel Muinos, Assistant
-
for recruitment of researchers: https://euraxess.ec.europa.eu/jobs/charter/code Unsolicited marketing is not appreciated. Dr E. Wilhelm, Assistant Professor in Control of Robotic Systems for Assistance and
-
employees coming to Wageningen. Furthermore, our Welcome Center can assist you with any additional advice and information about for example housing, opening a bank account, dual career programs or schooling
-
relevant discipline (e.g., data science, computer science, engineering science, artificial intelligence, or health science/psychology with specialization or additional training in data science); Demonstrable
-
differentiation of generic and complex computer programs (including control flows, data structures, and possibly memory) allows for the exploitation of any-order differentials to obtain transformative effects