61 maynooth-university-programmable-city-project Postdoctoral research jobs in Belgium
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(Horizon Europe Marie Curie fellowships), with the University of Antwerp as host institution. Project background Understanding the dynamics of microglia in brain disorders is critical for the future
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are seeking a motivated and enthusiastic colleague with strong computational skills in the analyses of complex data sets to join our teams. About the project We have generated advanced brain on chip models
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are seeking a motivated and enthusiastic colleague with strong computational skills in the analyses of complex data sets to join our teams. About the project We have generated advanced brain on chip models
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harnessed for further engineering. The ideal candidate has led a molecular-level scientific research project and has technical expertise in CRISPR, gene transformation, or other genetic tools applied to one
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Scene Synthesis: Re-design diffusion and NeRF-style models so multiple agents jointly reconstruct a scene. Cooperative Scene Understanding: Re-design semantic segmentation and object-detection models in a
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the framework of this project, the Van Damme lab is interested in how the interplay between the various secretory carrier membrane proteins (SCAMPs) and the various types of plasma membrane intrinsic proteins
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the ocean, with a focus on using model microbial systems in the lab. VIB is an entrepreneurial non-profit research institute across 5 universities with a strong track record of translating scientific
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postdoctoral researcher to join our team investigating sensory signaling in the bladder wall and its role in lower urinary tract disorders (LUTd). The project involves advanced techniques such as ex vivo calcium
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investigating sensory signaling in the bladder wall and its role in lower urinary tract disorders (LUTd). The project involves advanced techniques such as ex vivo calcium imaging of mouse and human urothelium, X
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project focusing on a long-standing and fascinating question : « what makes our brain cells human ? » (see our recent work : Hecker et al. Science 2025; Libé-Philippot et al. Cell 2023; Vanderhaeghen and