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PhD Position: Feedbacks and Agency in Future Water Use Faculty: Faculty of Geosciences Department: Department of Physical Geography Hours per week: 36 to 40 Application deadline: 19 December
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candidate in this project, you will use advanced imaging and molecular techniques to investigate defensive behaviors in larval zebrafish, providing new insights into the neurons and circuits involved. During
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antibodies) from individual serum samples. You will further develop and optimize these methods, with as special aim to enrich for antigen-specific antibodies. A secondary key objective is to improve
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the optimal mimic size for contrasting ecological settings in field experiments. Both PhD candidates will closely work together, and with a post-doc that will analyse patch-size dynamics as well as a post doc
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how cells determine their fate and function. Your job In this PhD project, you will study how the translation of mRNAs is regulated in space and time during early development. While this regulation is
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, evolutionarily conserved defensive behaviors. Your job As a PhD candidate in this project, you will use advanced imaging and molecular techniques to investigate defensive behaviors in larval zebrafish, providing
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. First, you will help build a light-sheet microscope optimized for voltage imaging at the single-cell and subcellular level in live larval zebrafish. The development of this system will be supported by Dr
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function differentiation, compositional Bayesian inference techniques); analyzing what is required (e.g., choice of data structures, static analyses and compiler optimizations, parallelism and concurrency
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sustainable chemical industry, but steady-state catalysis faces fundamental limitations. Deforming (straining) a catalyst back and forth in a dynamic fashion can theoretically boost catalytic performance, yet
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such as housing, work, income and sustainability) can become powerful drivers of societal change. Your job In this PhD position, you will study how citizen collectives can mobilise broad groups of citizens