53 multimodal-interaction-phd PhD positions at University of Groningen in Netherlands
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This fully funded PhD at the University of Groningen (NL) is part of the research project Critical language and multimodal awareness (CLMA): a key competency for future-oriented graduates
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Engineering, University of Groningen. The research is aimed at the development of novel methods for nanomedicine characterization and to study their interaction with cells (e.g. uptake, intracellular
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nanomedicines. In this project specifically, we aim to better understand the interactions between nanomedicines and the cell (membrane). Building upon previous work in the host group, the PhD candidate will use
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at the single protein level and to scrutinize the protein-protein interactions as well as the protein-nucleic acid interactions. The other PhD position is centred around Single Molecule Optical Tweezers (SMOT
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. We offer an excellent opportunity to engage into an exciting PhD project that combines microbiology, genetic, microscopy and biochemical tools in the context of a dynamic and enthusiastic work
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the protein-protein interactions as well as the protein-nucleic acid interactions. The other PhD position is centred around Single Molecule Optical Tweezers (SMOT) where the genome will be trapped between two
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genuinely transdisciplinary approach. This PhD position is embedded in the SPINES consortium, in which the University of Groningen collaborates with Radboud University, the University of Twente, and Utrecht
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environments. This particular project focusses on chronic infection of halophilic viruses. We offer an excellent opportunity to engage into an exciting PhD project that combines microbiology, genetic, microscopy
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Do you want to contribute to groundbreaking research that pushes the boundaries of science? Are you looking for a PhD position in which you can turn your curiosity into concrete research results and
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lead to better and fairer outcomes—challenges such as cognitive overload, uncalibrated (dis)trust in AI, and unclear strategies for bias mitigation limit its effectiveness in practice. This PhD project