Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Listed
-
Employer
-
Field
-
is to elucidate the molecular mechanisms through which somatic mutations affecting RNA splicing contribute to tumorigenesis, and to investigate the mechanisms driving resistance to CAR-T cell therapies
-
Knowledge in structural materials, experimental techniques, numerical modelling, mechanical testing, and data analysis will be valued. Specific Requirements Hold a PhD with a thesis completed in a PhD
-
PhD students working in quantum technologies at ICFO and with strong collaborations with our European academic partners. This project is funded by MCIN with funding from European Union NextGenerationEU
-
will strongly benefit from a multidisciplinary environment with other postdocs and PhD students working in quantum technologies at ICFO and other centres in the Barcelona area, and with strong
-
: Qualifications required: The candidate must have a PhD's degree in Biophysics, Biology, Bioengineering or equivalent. Expertise in image/data analysis and coding is required (Python, Image J). Experience in cell
-
opportunity for the successful candidates to pursue a career in the field of virology or immunology. Required Qualifications A PhD degree in microbiology, immunology or related field. Strong written and oral
-
3 years, name of selected research group at CINBIO, and five keywords related to the proposal. Completed and signed ethical issues form. Scanned copy of PhD diploma or an official statement
-
processes. Performing benchmarks in HPC machines in Japan and carrying optimizations to improve performance of the codes. Execution of simulations in top HPC facilities, both in Europe and Japan. Contribution
-
, and abroad. Required qualifications: The candidate should have a PhD in condensed matter physics, with strong background in high vacuum, cryogenics, electronics, transport and magnetic measurements
-
papers. Requirements: Education: PhD in Physics or related degree Knowledge: Complex oxides (Ferroelectrics, antiferroelectric, nickelates, etc), nanomechanics, photovoltaics, scanning force microscopy