Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Listed
-
Employer
-
Field
-
scenarios. The research combines field experiments, AI-based analysis of museum specimens, and advanced climate modeling to provide process-based insights into the ecological and economic consequences
-
We are looking for a postdoc to join our team at the Division of Signal Processing and Biomedical engineering, Department of Electrical Engineering. Become part of our innovative team and contribute
-
Foundation for Strategic Research (SSF). You will join a growing team that currently includes two PhD students. As a postdoc, you will support ongoing research while being encouraged to carve out your own
-
the underlying principles. For us, it is equally important to study the impact of materials on biological processes as well as the impact of biological processes on materials. Our ambition is to foster a dynamic
-
unexplored intersection between social cognition, attentional processing, and gaze perception. We use several different methods, including functional magnetic brain imaging (fMRI), behavioral and
-
systems for diagnostics and treatment. Core activities include signal processing, antenna design, and measurement hardware development. Building complete prototype systems for clinical testing is a central
-
new ways of processing information - far beyond the limits of classical systems. Our research spans quantum computing, sensing, transduction, thermodynamics, and foundations, all aimed at harnessing
-
imaging, computer vision, and predictive modelling. The postdoc will further develop an existing rumen‑fill scoring algorithm into a functional prototype and pilot the technology for longitudinal monitoring
-
transferable and interpretable models for tabular data, efficient learning paradigms for medical imaging, and causally grounded and identifiable representation learning. You will have great freedom to influence
-
engineering processing, material recycling, nuclear chemistry, theory and modelling. About the research project The project focuses on the development and synthesis of new π-conjugated organic semiconductors