Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Listed
-
Category
-
Employer
- CNRS
- Université Savoie Mont Blanc
- Université de Limoges
- UNIVERSITE DE TECHNOLOGIE DE COMPIEGNE
- Ecole Normale Superieure
- Ecoles Pratique des Hautes Etudes - PSL
- IMT Atlantique
- IMT Mines Ales
- IMT NORD EUROPE
- Inria, the French national research institute for the digital sciences
- Institut Pasteur
- Universite de Montpellier
- University of Tours
- Université de Caen Normandie
- Université de Pau et des Pays de l'Adour
- Université de Strasbourg
- École nationale des ponts et chaussées
- 7 more »
- « less
-
Field
-
/hydrodynamic simulations. Website for additional job details https://emploi.cnrs.fr/Offres/CDD/UMR6251-DIDLOI-001/Default.aspx Work Location(s) Number of offers available1Company/InstituteInstitut de physique de
-
analytical models and simulations to characterize the selective regimes, including polygenic selection, acting on genetic variants associated with complex diseases • Actively contribute to the writing
-
. The recuited postdoc will specifically detect OR gene duplications, losses and copy number variations (CNVs) among the selected species and test for signatures of divergent evolution in sympatric species. 2
-
cases as well as a corpus of existing simulated and real data to be used for validation purposes based on open-data. - Work on a composable architecture able of high-bandwidth I/O, large storage
-
optics simulations is necessary. Additionally, proficiency in developing acquisition systems using C++ (ROOT) is highly desirable. The candidate must have strong teamwork skills and the ability to work in
-
modeling and simulation, and statistical inference (lead by mathematicians and biologists) - The recruited postdoc will be asked to work in the labs on a daily basis. - The recruited postdoc will be expected
-
salary: between €2,387 and €3,799, in accordance with the applicable pay scale and depending on prior experience. Applications should include a curriculum vitae, cover letter, copy of PhD diploma, and
-
1989). Simulations suggest that cohort effects, by generating variations in demographic parameters in adulthood, destabilize the dynamics of relatively stable populations but can stabilize those