Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Listed
-
Category
-
Employer
-
Field
-
Engage in teaching as required Required Qualifications PhD in Bioinformatics, Computer Science, Physics, Engineering, Bio-engineering, or equivalent Excellent track record in Bioinformatics with at least
-
successful candidate will have previous experience in computer science or data science, with a PhD and publications in at least one of the following areas: Formal modelling and verification of business
-
research experience at PhD level in a relevant area such as robotics and control preferably applied to robots with flexible links. The candidate is hence expected to have most of the following qualifications
-
are part of a sub-project on Algorithmic Sustainability in association with Professor Christina Lioma and her Machine Learning research team in the Department of Computer Science at the University
-
to the project deliverables while also supporting project management tasks, including deliverable preparation, milestone tracking, and communication across the consortium. Qualifications and requirements PhD
-
at conferences and meetings. Maintain high scientific rigor while fostering innovation and translational impact. Required Qualifications PhD in yeast synthetic biology, biotechnology, molecular biology, immunology
-
computational chemistry or physics will be preferred, but candidates with a solid background in statistics, computer science, and/or mathematics are also encouraged to apply. Programming skills (e.g., Python
-
Sustainability in association with Professor Christina Lioma and her Machine Learning research team in the Department of Computer Science at the University of Copenhagen. The sub-package focuses
-
high-impact journals Required qualifications: PhD degree (or equivalent) in physics, photonics, optical engineering, or a related field Solid hands-on laboratory experience in experimental optics, e.g
-
for applicants who have obtained their PhD within the past 4 years, have a good publication record, and have proven their expertise on computational electrodynamics and the theory of light–matter interactions