68 algorithm-development-"Multiple"-"Simons-Foundation"-"Prof" PhD positions at Nature Careers
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better The right place for IMPACT. SnT researchers engage in demand-driven projects. Through our Partnership Programme, we work on projects with more than 45 industry partners Multiple funding sources
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that may remove such constraints, leading to a fundamental challenge: the potential co-existence of genetically distinct clones, each supporting multiple stable cancer cell states. To understand the effect
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(entities) given the rules and the rules given the molecules. The aim of this project is to develop a theory and accompanying algorithms to decide if an abstract system can be instantiated by a concrete
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“Research for a life without cancer" is our mission at the German Cancer Research Center. We investigate how cancer develops, identify cancer risk factors and look for new cancer prevention
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empowering our people to fulfil their personal and professional ambitions · Gender-friendly environment with multiple actions to attract, develop and retain women in science · 32 days’ paid
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(Principal Investigator: Dr. Dorothea Golze, Chair of Theoretical Chemistry, Research area C): Research topic: Extension of the GW+C approach to materials In this position, you will develop highly accurate
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RTG2861-C2 (Principal Investigator: Dr. Dorothea Golze, Chair of Theoretical Chemistry, Research area C): Research topic: Extension of the GW+C approach to materials In this position, you will develop
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multiple actions to attract, develop and retain women in science · 32 days’ paid annual leave, 11 public holidays, 13-month salary, statutory health insurance · Flexible working hours, home
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“planar scanning probe microscopy”, a flexible approach to scanning probe microscopy developed in our group (Ernst … Reinhard, ACS Photonics 6, 2 (2019)) to turn nanogap cavities into a scanning probe
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. Dr. med. Alexander Busch investigates the regulation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-gonadal (HPG) axis—a key system in human reproductive development and fertility. The group combines clinical cohorts