Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
team includes a medical PhD student with pathology expertise who performs surgical specimen collection, tissue slicing, micro-CT scans, histological processing, and initial registration. The postdoc will
-
level, e.g. in medical physics, physics, biomedical engineering or computer science. It is mandatory that your PhD degree is on a topic relevant for this specific position, e.g. in medical image-based
-
the university hospital and the regional hospitals in the Central Denmark Region. We have approx. 30,000 square metres of modern research facilities for experimental surgery and medicine, animal facilities and
-
The Department of Ecoscience at Aarhus University invites applications for two postdoctoral positions to strengthen our research on image recognition, computer vision and deep learning applied
-
to interact and collaborate to develop robust ways to decode single molecule imaging data. Your profile The candidate should hold a PhD in biophysics, chemistry, nanoscience or related subjects and have a
-
be used to prepare lamella samples for high resolution cryo-EM imaging and tomography. From AI assisted image analysis, 3D models for key proteins and biomolecular complexes will be fitted into 3D
-
an experience in technology-assisted monitoring or computational image analysis. Expected start date and duration of employment The position will start in June 2026, with exact starting date as agreed between
-
hybrid models that integrate limnological knowledge into machine learning models following the paradigm of Knowledge-Guided Machine Learning (KGML). The position is part of an on-going project
-
: Programming skills (Python, and/or C# or similar programming language). Knowledge of some of the following fields: medical image data, database structure, image processing, creation of user-friendly WEB pages
-
. Nature Physics20, 970 (2024)). You will also work on expanding our coherent imaging methodology to look at dynamics and phase switching in materials at the nanoscale (Johnson et al. Nature Physics19, 215