Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Job Description Are you passionate about brain-computer interfaces (BCIs), neurorehabilitation, and intelligent assistive technologies? The Department of Health Technology (DTU Health Tech
-
Bioengineering aiming to design novel Carbohydrate-Active enZymes (CAZymes) de novo (from scratch). Using state-of-the-art AI-based protein design tools, the project integrates computational design with in vitro
-
Job Description Are you interested in the interrelationship between urban design and human mobility behaviour? Are you keen on using advanced computer science to help create more knowledge on how
-
Lab at DTU Bioengineering — a vibrant, multidisciplinary team working at the interface of proteomics, computational biology, and translational research. Responsibilities and qualifications You must be
-
, electronics, and neuromorphic computing. You will join an international collaboration between DTU, EPFL, and Max Planck, gaining unique opportunities to work at the intersection of materials science, physics
-
general planning of the PhD study programme, please see DTU's rules for the PhD education . We offer DTU is a leading technical university globally recognized for the excellence of its research, education
-
requirements and the general planning of the PhD study programme, please see DTU's rules for the PhD education . Assessment The assessment of the applicants will be performed by Professor Kasper S. Pedersen. We
-
modeling of complex information systems, and SDU and the Royal Danish Defence College’s established intelligence studies and practice. By introducing computational modeling to traditional intelligence
-
when high-quality DNA or close reference genomes are unavailable. As part of a Novo Nordisk Foundation-funded project, you will design and implement computational pipelines, conduct comparative
-
/multiqubit . The project is supported by an ERC Consolidator grant (€ 2.6 million) from the European Research Council (EU). Our research aims at exploring quantum information science at the nanoscale and