11 phd-in-structural-engineering "https:" "IMT Atlantique" Postdoctoral positions at UNIVERSITY OF HELSINKI
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“Generational Change for Productive Structural Transformation in Agriculture.” The project is led by Professor Pia Nilsson and is based at the Agricultural Economics group in collaboration with similar projects
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microeconomics. The position is fixed term for three years with a six-month trial period. The position is part of a new research project “Generational Change for Productive Structural Transformation in Agriculture
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funding. The start date is 1 September 2026. The appointee is expected to reside in the Helsinki Metropolitan Area during the employment. QUALIFICATIONS AND EVALUATION Applicants are required to hold a PhD
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structured data sets within a joint species distribution modelling framework. For more information, see: https://www.helsinki.fi/en/researchgroups/research-centre-for-ecological-change . The Department
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facilities, and opportunities for professional development (https://www.helsinki.fi/en/about-us/careers ). YOUR PROFILE PhD in biology, mathematics, or a related field Strong background in mathematical
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The position requires: A doctoral degree relevant to the project (e.g., biology, genomics, evolutionary biology) Less than seven years since obtaining the PhD Ability to conduct independent scholarly work Strong
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for your next career stage. Your profile Recent PhD in Cell Biology, Neuroscience, Biochemistry or a related discipline. A strong academic track record, and at least one recent first-author publication
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& computational analysis (choose a combination) Single-cell RNA-seq analysis (e.g., Seurat/Scanpy, QC, integration/batch correction, clustering, annotation) Multimodal integration and/or feature engineering
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. The appointee is expected to reside in the Helsinki Metropolitan Area during the employment. QUALIFICATIONS AND EVALUATION Applicants are required to hold a PhD in a relevant field, such as memory studies
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activities (approximately 16% of working time) and supervising PhD students in applied economics research at the University of Helsinki. In addition, the researcher can use up to 50 per cent of their working