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us in establishing the research unit. About the Head of the Research Unit The Head of the Max Planck-Humboldt Research Unit at Muni University is Dr. Geoffrey Andama, currently a Marie Skłodowska-Curie
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Max Planck Institute for Brain Research, Frankfurt am Main | Frankfurt am Main, Hessen | Germany | 22 days ago
Job Offer from August 01, 2025 The Max Planck Institute for Brain Research (MPI for Brain Research) in Frankfurt/Main is a leading research institution in the field of basic neuroscience research
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the measurement and analysis of brain signals is advantageous, but not essential. The applicant’s merits are assessed on the basis of the quality of Master’s level and PhD studies and theses, previous experience
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The Department of General and Visceral Surgery (Head: Prof. Dr. Stefan Fichtner-Feigl) invites talented and highly gifted candidates to apply as Postdoctoral Researcher (m/f/d) in Bioinformatics in
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to platform development for metabolic engineering What you bring to the table PhD in biotechnology, microbiology, molecular biology, or a related field Experience working with strict anaerobes, ideally with
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Association. WIAS invites applications as Research Assistant Position (f/m/d) (Ref. 25/14) (PostDoc) in the Research Group Nonlinear Optimization and Inverse Problems (Head: Prof. Dr. D. Hömberg) starting as
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students and technicians Maintain accurate documentation of protocols and instrument logs; liaise with service and facility management Your profile: PhD (or equivalent) in analytical/biological chemistry
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bring to the table PhD in biotechnology, microbiology, molecular biology, or a related field Experience working with strict anaerobes, ideally with Clostridia Strong hands-on skills in molecular biology
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independent researcher embedded within the CRC, you will shape how the global community evaluates and compares brain-inspired and AI-based vision models. Your Role Develop next-generation benchmarks and
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the brain and nervous system. Our goal is to contribute to neurotechnologies that are minimally invasive, and possibly implanted with no surgical intervention. Specifically, we develop wireless nanoelectrodes