Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Listed
-
Category
-
Program
-
Employer
-
Field
-
in English, both written and spoken, with the ability to communicate complex ideas clearly; - who has experience with statistical programming (e.g., Stata, R); - who is motivated to study policy
-
mutualistic and antagonistic insect flower visitors in the greenhouse and in the field. Analyse complex data sets involving e.g. metabarcode sequencing Chemical analysis of flower nectar using HPLC and GC-MS
-
flexible as possible. The integration platform consists of two main components: The Enterprise Service Bus (ESB): based on microservices built in C#/.NET Core, using event-driven messaging via RabbitMQ
-
experiments with herbivorous insects, plants and microbes Analysing complex data involving e.g. metabarcoding, metagenomics, and metabolomics Isolating and culturing microbes and testing inoculants on insect
-
include: Designing and executing experiments with plants, microbes, insects and drought stress Analyse complex data sets involving metagenomics, transcriptomics and metabolomics Manipulate the soil
-
. Proficiency in English, both written and spoken, with the ability to communicate complex ideas clearly. Experience with statistical programming (e.g., Stata, R). Ability to work collaboratively in a
-
to develop innovative solutions to complex problems; acting as a spokesperson for our organisation on One Health in the media, including social media platform, and for the society; developing and implementing
-
, subsidies, confidentiality, liability, etc. These include various types of research contracts, such as large and complex consortia between WUR and multinational companies in the food sector. The department’s
-
Strong presenting skills: Comfortable explaining complex policies and details in an easily digestible manner for colleagues from a wide variety of backgrounds When collaborating and negotiating with
-
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