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100%, Zurich, fixed-term The Programming, Education, and Computer-Human Interaction group in the Department of Computer Science is recruiting one research intern to work broadly in the area of
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, and be at the beginning of their research career. Principal qualifications include strong analytical and quantitative skills in numerical analysis, programming, high-performance computing, as
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interplay of science, technology and society using frameworks and methods from Science, Technology & Society (STS), history, philosophy, anthropology, critical theory, and the arts. We privilege interpretive
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development of algorithms and large-scale numerical simulations. Your expertise will extend to various areas, including quantum Monte Carlo, machine learning, quantum computing, quantum machine learning, and
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meta-optics have led to an advanced control over light-matter interaction, greatly contributing to different research directions including imaging, nonlinear optics, biosensing and photonic computing
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of Medical Microbiology at the University of Zurich, the Department of Informatics at ETHZ and several further partners, we address the challenge by the combining microfluidic technology, sequencing and fast
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CAD packages (Autodesk Revit, Archicad and cadwork3d) and work in a multi-disciplinary team of software engineers, architects, computer scientists Your projects will include multi-disciplinary
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devices from motors and actuators to sensors, memories, and emerging paradigms for computation. Despite their technological importance, many fundamental aspects of their behavior remain elusive, especially
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toxic substance. Therefore, methods for detecting, quantifying and separating enantiomers are critical to many fields, including biochemistry and pharmaceutics. However, standard methods are often not
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transformation in bacteria – an important mode of horizontal gene transfer. We use complementary approaches including cryo-EM, biophysical methods and in vivo functional assays to study the protein machineries