27 computational-complexity-"Prof"-"Prof" Postdoctoral positions at Technical University of Munich
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02.07.2025, Wissenschaftliches Personal The Professorship of Energy Management Technologies at TUM’s School of Engineering and Design is looking for a Postdoc (f/m/d) in Energy Informatics. You are
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Do a PostDoc in Pathology AI! 11.10.2023, Wissenschaftliches Personal The Computational Pathology Lab at the Technical University of Munich (TUM), TUM School of Computation, Information and
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advanced machine learning methods for multimodal and 3D medical image analysis in musculoskeletal medicine, in close collaboration with clinicians and computer scientists. PhD or Postdoctoral Researcher
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of targeted therapies. Analyzing high-dimensional single-cell data has its own statistical and computational challenges, and standard tools often cannot be applied. The purpose of the position and goal
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., for quantum computing, microfluidics, or conventional circuits and systems. Our focus on interdisciplinary partnerships and networks will enable you to meet many interesting people (at places all over the world
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computer aided methods. Qualifications and Experience • Outstanding academic degree in materials science, metallurgy, metal physics or similar degree • Excellent doctorate with focus on computational
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the study of the impact of digital and computational pathology on clinical workflows and patient care. Our lab is located in the heart of Munich at the TUM Klinikum rechts der Isar (MRI), Institute
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Engineering, Computer Engineering, Computer Science, or a closely related field Strong background in robotics fundamentals: kinematics, dynamics, control, planning Proficiency in programming (C++, Python), and
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the faculties of medicine and computer science at TUM, as well as the Munich Center for Machine Learning (MCML). It is a great place for interdisciplinary research between medicine and data science. We
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technologies to fundamental physics questions. The advertised positions will be part of the project “QS-Gauge: quantum simulation of lattice gauge theories”, funded by the Emmy Noether programme of the DFG