46 computer-programmer-"The-University-of-Edinburgh" Postdoctoral positions at Technical University of Munich
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of Orthopaedics and Sports Orthopaedics and the Institute for AI and Informatics in Medicine. We work at the intersection of artificial intelligence, medical imaging, and clinical practice, developing methods
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technologies to fundamental physics questions. The advertised positions will be part of the project “QS-Gauge: quantum simulation of lattice gauge theories”, funded by the Emmy Noether programme of the DFG
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to contribute to groundbreaking work in our research area. About the Program: We are implementing a program that creates an additional two year postdoctoral position exclusively for female researchers working in
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or Postdoc Position in Numerical Mathematics m/f/d, 100%, 2 years+ As part of the second phase of the DFG funded Priority Programme SPP2311, the Chair for Numerical Mathematics under the leadership
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the study of the impact of digital and computational pathology on clinical workflows and patient care. Our lab is located in the heart of Munich at the TUM Klinikum rechts der Isar (MRI), Institute
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following areas: Mathematical Analysis/ Numerical Analysis/ Theoretical Machine Learning Please note: Applications from candidates with degrees in other disciplines (e.g., Computer Science, Engineering) will
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: Excellent Master’s degree (or equivalent) in computer science, engineering, or related disciplines (typically mathematics, physics). For Postdoc applicants: Excellent track record in computer
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Engineering, Computer Engineering, Computer Science, or a closely related field Strong background in robotics fundamentals: kinematics, dynamics, control, planning Proficiency in programming (C++, Python), and
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] Subject Area: Representation Theory Appl Deadline: 2025/07/31 11:59PM (posted 2025/07/01) Position Description: Position Description The TUM School of Computation, Information and Technology at the Technical
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that algorithmic parameters are tuned so that the over-approximation of the computed reachable set is small enough to verify a given specification. We will demonstrate our approach not only on ARCH benchmarks, but