Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
wet-lab researchers, clinicians, and computational scientists contributing to manuscripts, grant applications, and scientific presentations supervising MSc and PhD student projects Entry requirements We
-
of the largest pan-cancer signaling models in the literature. SPARCED is compatible with high-performance and cloud computing, can simulate thousands to millions of single-cell trajectories, is easily expandable
-
, you should: Have a PhD in some area of nucleic acid research preferably with bioinformatic or computational focus. Have expert knowledge in working with and developing bioinformatics tools in Python
-
following criteria, you are encouraged to apply. In order of decreasing importance, you should: Have a PhD in some area of nucleic acid research preferably with bioinformatic or computational focus. Have
-
leadership skills and supervise students REQUIREMENTS: PhD degree in life sciences (finished no longer than 2 years ago) Strong interest in microscopy methods Experience in cell and molecular biology
-
Postdoctoral Position and Postdoctoral Fellowship (2yrs) in Intracellular Host-Pathogen Interactions
university degree equivalent to a European PhD in molecular biology, cell biology, infection biology, or a closely related field at the time of the appointment decision. Preference will be given to applicants
-
the following documents: Letter highlighting your qualification and motivation CV including publication list Copy of PhD certificate, and other relevant exam certificates Contact information of 2 references
-
. Applicants must have been awarded a doctoral degree (PhD), or a foreign degree deemed equivalent, in Chemistry, Physics, Materials Science, or a closely related discipline. The degree requirements must be
-
international academic groups and industrial actors. The applicant must have completed a PhD degree in a relevant field at the time of employment. The applicant is further expected to have experience with
-
departments within the Faculty of Science and Technology and has about 200 employees, of which about 40 are research students. The department has strong and expanding research in four major areas: Biological