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-year PhD position in reflection seismology for Carbon Capture and Sequestration (CCS) hosted by the Mathematical Geophysics group. The Mathematical Geophysics group at ETH Zurich investigates a wide
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of mathematics, computer science, and evolutionary biology. We develop methods to understand evolutionary, ecological, epidemiological, and developmental processes on different scales based on genetic data. In our
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and technology partners to evaluate emerging instrumentation and software and translate them into robust, scalable workflows. Alongside method development, the Zamboni Lab is tightly embedded in
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postdoc to join its research team studying the political economy of low-carbon technologies (LCTs) and climate policy. The PET group adopts an interdisciplinary, mixed-method approach grounded in political
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that investigate the impact of pedagogical interventions on misinformation resilience The dissertation should comprise a series of experiments that combine quantitative and qualitative methods The PhD student will
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cutting-edge technologies to dissect these interactions: high-density microelectrode arrays (HD-MEAs) for large-scale electrophysiology, spatial transcriptomic methods, and human iPSC-derived neuronal
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the world’s largest tropical wetland. To do so, we will sample greenhouse gases, peatland soils, and lake sediments, and we will analyze these using isotopes, biomarkers, and DNA-based methods. This PhD student
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, questions and methods are encouraged We also encourage projects on non-European mathematics, commercial or practical mathematics, cross-cultural mathematical exchange, and philosophical projects that consider
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. The selected candidate will hold the first artistic practice-based PhD position at ETH. The position assumes both practical and theoretical outcomes. The ideal candidate: Has a background in art, architecture
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the world’s largest tropical wetland. To do so, we will sample greenhouse gases, peatland soils, and lake sediments, and we will analyze these using isotopes, biomarkers, and DNA-based methods. This PhD student