Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Listed
-
Category
-
Country
-
Field
-
-supervision from Prof. Anna Wieczorek (Eindhoven University of Technology) and Dr. Christina Bidmon (Utrecht University). As a PhD candidate, you will be embedded in the Department of Organization Studies
-
children. Mechanistic modelling of disease transmission involves the use of computer code to represent the epidemic dynamics of infectious disease spread within the community. This allows modellers
-
embedded in the research programme of FEB’s Research Institute. The project will be supervised by Prof. Robert Lensink (Faculty of Economics and Business), email: b.w.lensink@rug.nl , Prof. Han Olff (Faculty
-
Prof. Tanja Lange to conduct research and publish results at top-ranked international academic conferences and journals. You will be expected to collaborate with fellow PhD candidates and researchers
-
and/or dynamic approaches to detect them in the code or prevent their execution at runtime. Keywords for this project: code analysis, static analysis, reverse engineering, defense mechanisms
-
@ugent.be . We do not accept late applications. For more information about this vacancy, please contact Prof. Bart Leroy or Dr. Maria del Rocío Pérez Baca (bart.leroy@uzgent.be , +32 9 332 63 44
-
German Universities of Excellence and provides outstanding working, research, and networking possibilities. The position will be in the group of Prof. Thomas Heine at the Chair of Theoretical Chemistry
-
into their workflows. You will benchmark the supports, MEMS devices and developed codes on known multiphased reference samples. The TEM will be done at EMAT (University of Antwerp) under guidance of Prof. Dr. Joke
-
the department of Experimental Psychology at the Faculty of Behavioural and Social Sciences. The candidate will work under the shared supervision of Prof Dr Jelmer Borst (Artificial Intelligence) and Prof Dr Elkan
-
: TRR408-A7 Investigators: Prof. Dr. Ostap Okhrin, Chair of Econometrics and Statistics esp. in the Transport Sector and co-supervised by Prof. Dr. Kai Nagel, Chair of Transportation System