50 verification-computer-science Postdoctoral research jobs at Nature Careers in Germany
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, epigenetics, cardiovascular science, computational biology, or a related field A strong background in chromatin biology, gene regulation, and/ or cardiovascular biology Prior experience with genomics
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an attractive drug target. The position is funded by an Emmy Noether DFG grant and aims to combine single-molecule localization methods and cell biology to decipher the stoichiometry and dynamics of plexin
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PhD Student / Postdoctoral Researcher (gn*) Molecular Biology Reference Number: 10836 Fixed term of 3 years | Full- or Part-Time (65% or 100%) | Salary Grade TV-L E13 | Centre of Reproductive
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of Schleswig-Holstein (10 %) and is one of the internationally leading institutions in the field of marine sciences. Through our research and our commitment to the transfer of knowledge and technology, we
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(independently and in our team) involvement in teaching across different life science study programs at the Faculty of Medicine Required skills: Ph.D. (or comparable) in Bioinformatics, Computational Biology
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, probabilistic models Representation learning, self-supervised learning, foundation models Data analysis, non-linear statistics, knowledge management Your profile PhD in Computer Science, Bioinformatics
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, WES/WGS, targeted NGS, DigiWest), a broad spectrum of molecular and cellular biology techniques, biochemistry and biophysics, computational drug repurposing, and de novo design of novel protein-based
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research on the topic outlined above is paramount Candidates are expected to be interested in working at the boundaries of several research domains PhD degree in computational biology, bioinformatics
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and clinical translation. Supported by the Carl Zeiss Foundation , an ERC Starting Grant , and the DFG Emmy Noether Program, our lab provides a highly collaborative and interdisciplinary environment
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environment in the fields of science, technology and administration as well as for the education of highly qualified young scientists. The computational imaging group at DESY is concerned with the development