11 medical-computer-engineering Postdoctoral research jobs at University of Copenhagen in Denmark
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Danish University, the Alexandra Institute, and the University of Copenhagen. The candidate will be co-supervised from both the Centre for Language Technology and the Department of Computer Science and
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The Department of Food Science, section of Ingredient and Dairy Technology, invites applicants for a fulltime postdoctorate fellowship in Food Ingredients Processing. The position is for 2 years
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at the Faculty of Health & Medical Sciences and has been located in the Maersk Tower at the Panum building since 2017. The around 250 employees create an international, highly collaborative research environment
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linear ballistic accumulator models, diffusion models, biased competition models, or Bayesian models. During the employment, the candidate is expected to engage in the development of computational models
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for a Postdoc position focused on process scale-up and industrial implementation of carbon capture technology derived from PET plastic Waste. The project is part of the research project “VPX BAETA Carbon
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possible thereafter. The successful candidate will be employed in the Ingredient and Dairy Technology section and will join the Food Proteins Research Group. Application Deadline: 30 May 2025 About the
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. Professor Johan Andersen-Ranberg. The fellow’s main duties will include conducting experimental molecular biology research on eukaryotic microalgae, performing genome engineering in algae, and carrying out
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the section Ingredient and Dairy Technology. Further information on the Department is linked at https://food.ku.dk/english/ . Inquiries about the position can be made to Tenure Track Assistant Professor Norbert
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leading one of two human intervention studies. Working closely with medical doctors, technical staff, and bioanalytical personnel, the Research Scientist will be responsible for ensuring the scientific and
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cutting-edge experimental and computational technologies. Our aim is to dissect dynamics and cellular programmes active during human blood lineage development and to decipher how haematopoietic