51 computer-science-programming-languages-"St"-"ST"-"University-of-St" PhD positions at Leibniz in Germany
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strong background in one of the biological disciplines covered by PRIDAS (behavioral biology, data science, neuroscience, physiology, genetics) Knowledge of at least one analytical programming language
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as a PhD student in TUM’s graduate programme. Key responsibilities: Co-designing research methodology/approaches to study the political economy of climate mitigation policies in low- and middle-income
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the programme area ‘Plant Adaptation’ (ADAPT). The aim of the research project is to understand how intrinsically disordered regions (IDRs) and prion-like domains (PLDs) control the temperature responsiveness
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another quantitative social science. Proven skills in empirical methods and proficiency in at least one programming or scripting language (e.g., R, Python, Stata). - Experience with the integration and
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. For the research domain Climate Economics and Policy, led by Prof. Sabine Fuss and Prof. Matthias Kalkuhl, PIK is offering a position as a PhD in Economics (m/f/d) (Position number: 33-2025 PhD Spatial Equilibrium
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%, limited for 3 years, start: as soon as possible) in the trilateral program “Future Proofing Plants to a Changing Climate” (funded by DFG, UKRI-BBSRC, NSF, USDA-NIFA) Who we are: The research group Symbiosis
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science foundation (DFG). Doctoral students (m/f/d) are facilitated to participate in the doctoral program in order to successfully complete their dissertation. We offer an attractive workplace with
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to fulfill the aims of this projects, computational chemistry aspects of the project will be co-supervised by Dr. Mehedi Davari at the IPB (Projects: Leibniz Institute of Plant Biochemistry English ) and
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. The communication language of the lab is English. The group interacts tightly with the Research Group Cognitive Neurophysiology (PI M. Yoshida; in-vitro/in vivo electrophysiology & computational neurosciences) as
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tools to evaluate the ecological role of parasites and virus in the Elbe Estuary. The work is carried out as part of the DFG Graduate Program “Biota-Mediated Effects of Carbon Cycling in Estuaries