83 assistant-professor-and-data-visualization Postdoctoral research jobs in Netherlands
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to contribute to an interdisciplinary project and collaborate with colleagues working on quantitative (survey) and qualitative (visual culture) approaches. You have a strong interest in non-religion, atheism, and
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- and data-driven, contributing to both fundamental research and regulatory applications. On the one hand, you will help improve the understanding of the dominant role size plays in system functioning
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, information over interaction, and automation over agency. Futures of Language aims to understand what happens when we invert those priorities. As a postdoctoral researcher, you will conduct and publish original
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unwanted biases. Finally, with the aim of clinical use, you will design and create a user interface that can be easily used by end users to visualize predictions and explanations for individual patients. You
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information, you may contact (please do not use these email addresses for applications): Ellen van der Werff, Associate Professor - Environmental Psychology, ellen.van.der.werff@rug.nl Gabriel Muinos, Assistant
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. Wilhelm, Assistant Professor in Control of Robotic Systems for Assistance and Rehabilitation, e.wilhelm@rug.nl (please do not use the email addresses above for applications)
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for recruitment of researchers: https://euraxess.ec.europa.eu/jobs/charter/code Unsolicited marketing is not appreciated. Dr E. Wilhelm, Assistant Professor in Control of Robotic Systems for Assistance and
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University & Research's International Community page contains practical information about what we can do to support international employees coming to Wageningen. Furthermore, our Welcome Center can assist
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external to ESA; lead and assist in interdisciplinary projects with other researchers; participate, together with the Team, in the assessment of novel space system concepts and propose new concepts and
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differentiation of generic and complex computer programs (including control flows, data structures, and possibly memory) allows for the exploitation of any-order differentials to obtain transformative effects