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(FSTM) at the University of Luxembourg contributes multidisciplinary expertise in the fields of Mathematics, Physics, Engineering, Computer Science, Life Sciences and Medicine. Through its dual mission
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(bio-)chemistry, physics, and engineering expertise to study molecules and cells, taking advantage of optical and single-molecule imaging, molecular probes, molecular biology, and 'large' data analysis
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students who are eager to develop and apply artificial intelligence techniques and mechanistic mathematical models to explore fundamental questions in biology. The PhD program is organized in partnership
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of these materials.State-of-the-art characterization techniques such as DSC, DMA, DTMA, micro-Computed Tomography (micro-CT), optical microscopy and Scanning Electron Microscopy (SEM) are combined with advanced numerical
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science and microscopy. The preferred starting date is 1 November. A stimulating research environment at Campus Groenenborger, equipped with state-of-the-art instrumentation and computing facilities
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, and data scientists to develop and optimize experimental pipelines. Gain experience in both wet-lab and computational techniques to tackle some of the most important questions in microbiome science
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candidate will work closely with experts in food allergy, neuroimmunology, gut physiology, and computational biology to characterize immune cell responses, construct spatial maps of inflammation along the gut
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diverse academic backgrounds to contribute to our projects in areas such as: Network Security, Information Assurance, Model-driven Security, Cloud Computing, Cryptography, Satellite Systems, Vehicular
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genetics, cell biology, genomics, and bio-computing to unravel plant biological processes and to further translate this knowledge into value for society. Please visit us at www.psb.ugent.be for more
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life. The successful candidate will work closely with experts in food allergy, neuroimmunology, gut physiology, and computational biology to characterize immune cell responses, construct spatial maps