Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Listed
-
Category
-
Country
-
Field
-
interdisciplinary, and together we contribute to science and society. Your role The Junior Research Group in AI in Biomedical Imaging conducts applied AI research focused on biomedical image computing. Our work
-
the Clinic for Radiology. As one of Germany's leading university radiology departments, we provide all outpatients and inpatients at UKM with state-of-the-art diagnostic imaging and image-guided therapy
-
Dortmund, we invite applications for the Research Group Analysis of Microscopic BIOMedical Images (AMBIOM): PhD Candidate (m/f/d) The position is part of the DFG-funded project: ComplexEye - a 96/384-well
-
candidate eager to operate at the interface of molecular biology, neuroscience, and AI. Responsibilities Wet-Lab & Experimental Work Set up and optimize imaging based spatial transcriptomics protocols.Set up
-
imaging and spectroscopy of nanoparticles using advanced broad- and focused-beam transmission electron microscopy (TEM) techniques. Structure–Catalysis Relationships at the Atomic Scale Use custom
-
Differentiate iPSCs into midbrain dopaminergic neurons and organoids for phenotyping and compound testing High content imaging and automated image-analysis Analyze omics data Collaborate closely with
-
learning, deep learning, and LLM-based methods to multimodal clinical datasets e.g. EHR, imaging, omics, sensor data Designing and implementing NLP pipelines for clinical text processing, semantic annotation
-
-derived samples for detailed phenotyping of sperm flagella and motile cilia, ultrastructural analysis, and assessment of flagellar/ciliary motility Analysing multi-omics, imaging, and functional datasets
-
(https://www.cliccs.uni-hamburg.de/about-cliccs/cliccs-ll.html ). In CLICCS-M4, we are further developing the unique ICON-Coast model within the ICON Earth System Modelling Framework. The objective
-
Andrology (CeRA). Here, we investigate the cellular and molecular mechanisms underlying vascular and lymphatic control of gonad development, using advanced imaging, zebrafish models, and organoid systems. Our