Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Listed
-
Category
-
Employer
-
Field
-
PhD position within the project "What's wrong? Ancient corrections in Greek papyri from Egypt" (AnCo
regular meetings of the project research group; You will participate in the training programme of the LUCAS Institute, the Leiden Graduate School of Humanities, the National Research School in Classical
-
analysis, and high-performance simulations? We offer a challenging PhD position in the Mathematics of Computational Science group to design and analyse novel structure-preserving methods for stochastic
-
environments. About the organisation The Faculty of Geo-Information Science and Earth Observation (ITC) provides international postgraduate education, research and project services in the field of geo
-
Economics research group. Building on the group’s expertise in firm organisation, the vision of this project is to apply concepts from Personnel Economics to sports and/or education contexts. Specific topics
-
publications, and assisting in organizing and presenting at workshops and conferences; Take relevant courses and training; Participate in the PhD program activities and the intellectual life of the Institute
-
dedicated Master's program in Ecology and Evolution that offers extensive fieldwork opportunities. Furthermore, the university-wide Rudolf Agricola School for Sustainable Development engages FSE members in
-
systems—commonly referred to as neuromorphic computing—holds the potential to create highly intelligent machines capable of supporting a wide range of everyday applications, from autonomous vehicles
-
systems—commonly referred to as neuromorphic computing—holds the potential to create highly intelligent machines capable of supporting a wide range of everyday applications, from autonomous vehicles
-
systems—commonly referred to as neuromorphic computing—holds the potential to create highly intelligent machines capable of supporting a wide range of everyday applications, from autonomous vehicles
-
systems—commonly referred to as neuromorphic computing—holds the potential to create highly intelligent machines capable of supporting a wide range of everyday applications, from autonomous vehicles