Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Listed
-
Category
-
Program
-
Employer
-
Field
-
, Environmental and Geomatic Engineering (D-BAUG), has an opening for a researcher focused on data and process analysis to enable digitalized railway operations. Project background Safe and efficient railway
-
ideal for students with strong technical and organizational skills, particularly those with experience in LaTeX and Python programming. Some background in economics is a plus but not strictly required
-
to power outstanding events and digital outreach. Requirements A university degree, ideally with exposure to AI topics or international affairs Professional fluency in English; German is an asset Strong
-
collegial and inclusive workplace are essential. Applicants should hold a MSc degree in ecology, botany, biogeography, environmental science, computational biology or related fields. Very good written and
-
, or materials science. Background in solid-state physics and a demonstrated interest in experimental research. Programming for scientific simulations. Proficiency in oral and written English. Additional assets
-
Portfolio Projects. We are an in-foundation startup, building upon a multi-year research and development program focused on a novel class of surgical materials. With a strong foundation in translational
-
. Profile The ideal candidate will be a computer science student or a student with extensive practical programming experience. Interest in the social sciences and law is a big advantage. Workplace Workplace
-
exceptional individuals who will develop and lead a research program at the forefront of the discipline and who will have a strong commitment to excellence in undergraduate and graduate-level teaching. We look
-
Python-based agent pipelines (e.g., LangGraph) and integrate diverse large language models (LLMs) and multimodal vision models. Additionally, you'll build and maintain data flows specifically tailored
-
a robust predictive framework that enables precise prediction of reaction outcomes. The project is part of an international collaboration with the German Priority Program on the “Utilization and