45 parallel-processing-bioinformatics-"Multiple" research jobs at University of Bergen
Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
in shaping the future? PhD position There is a vacancy for a PhD Research Fellow in Snow Processes in Mountainous Regions at the Geophysical Institute and the Bjerknes Centre for Climate Research
-
1st October 2025 Languages English English Norsk Nynorsk English PhD Research Fellow on Snow Processes on Coastal Ice Caps Apply for this job See advertisement UiB - Knowledge that shapes society
-
1st October 2025 Languages English English Norsk Nynorsk English PhD Research Fellow in Snow Processes in Mountainous Regions Apply for this job See advertisement UiB - Knowledge that shapes society
-
computer science, systems engineering, cybernetics, applied mathematics or another relevant degree at the same level, and applicants must also have a specialization in signal processing, bioinformatics, simulation
-
specialization in signal processing, bioinformatics, simulation/visualization, or dynamic systems, or have the doctoral thesis submitted prior to the application deadline. It is a condition of employment that
-
in a previous PhD project. In addition to electromagnetic geophysics, the candidate is expected to contribute to the development of novel workflows for joint inversion of multiple data types (e.g
-
objectives are to (i) improve process understanding of variation and context-dependencies in biodiversity change, (ii) assess and compare the impacts of multiple global change drivers, and (iii) explore
-
-high-resolution analyses of lake sediments to reconstruct glacier dynamics across multiple regions. The findings will contribute to understanding future glacier changes in Scandinavia and globally and
-
will investigate the patterns, drivers, and consequences of vegetation change in mountainous regions. The overall objectives are to (i) improve process understanding of variation and context-dependencies
-
dynamics across multiple regions. The findings will contribute to understanding future glacier changes in Scandinavia and globally and will be communicated to stakeholders and European mountain research