Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Listed
-
Employer
-
Field
-
The Digital Humanities Lab at the University of Basel is looking for a postdoctoral research assistant as of 1st April 2026 or by arrangement. The Digital Humanities is an interdisciplinary
-
model systems (like Drosophila or human pluripotent stem cells) and thus are a highly diverse group. We are seeking a Postdoctoral Researcher to join our team in an ERC-funded project. In this project, we
-
related to staff position within a Research Infrastructure? No Offer Description The Digital Humanities Lab at the University of Basel is looking for a postdoctoral research assistant as of 1st April 2026
-
National Science Foundation. The project’s goal is to better understand the structure and functioning of human working memory using behavioral experiments, complemented by EEG when scientifically relevant
-
The Digital Humanities Lab at the University of Basel is looking to hire a postdoc in the research group led by Prof. Rosa Lavelle-Hill, which focuses on applications of Artificial Intelligence (AI
-
. The main research focus of our division is the relationship between physical activity and cognitive performance across development. Possible research topics within this position include, among others
-
synthetic responses to psychological experiments and how these compare with human data. Within the scope of a given behavioral domain, we design theoretically guided prompting strategies and study when LLM
-
metastasis through regulation of anti-cancer immunity and cancer metabolism. Studies will be primarily performed in CRC mouse models, with confirmatory work in human CRC tissue. We will focus on mechanistic
-
with human data. Within the scope of a given behavioral domain, we design theoretically guided prompting strategies and study when LLM and human responses converge or diverge. The project requires
-
cutting-edge technologies to dissect these interactions: high-density microelectrode arrays (HD-MEAs) for large-scale electrophysiology, spatial transcriptomic methods, and human iPSC-derived neuronal