27 affective-computing-"https:"-"https:"-"https:" PhD positions at University of Southern Denmark in Denmark
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Odense. The research project—funded by the Velux Foundation—examines when exposure to negative news informs people about important societal issues and when it negatively affects mental well-being and leads
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description The PhD position is funded by a grant from the Novo Nordic Foundation to investigate the impact of early exposure to PFAS on puberty timing and neurodevelopment (assessed by neuropsychologists
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the past decade. Although many experience improvement in their symptoms, we still know far too little about how these medications affect children and adolescents in the long term. In particular, there is
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infrastructure (electricity, district heating, biomass conversion facilities, etc.) Collaborate with local stakeholders, Complete required PhD courses (30 ECTS) and research stay abroad, Publish in high-impact
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. The environmental medicine group study the impact of early life exposures to environmental chemicals. In particular per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) is a main focus area, with studies of the adverse health
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investigates how AI affects both news production and consumption and assesses the adequacy of existing legal frameworks in addressing these transformations. Read more about the project HERE . Employment can be
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the highest international standards, demonstrated by publications in leading journals, presentations at global conferences, competitive external funding, and significant societal impact. CPop is also committed
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Job Description A PhD position in computational pharmaceutical science is available at the Department of Physics, Chemistry and Pharmacy (FKF) at the University of Southern Denmark (SDU). The
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computational challenges. This PhD project will investigate novel registration strategies for ultrasound-derived musculoskeletal point clouds. The work will focus on developing geometry-aware alignment methods
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groups in light–matter interactions and nanophotonics, as well as to theoretical physicists in the Department of Mathematics and Computer Science. We collaborate closely with scientists of the ALPS II