140 master-"https:" "https:" "https:" "https:" "UCL" positions at Nature Careers in Germany
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of cellular systems at molecular scale. It consists of about 200 employees from more than 25 countries, and is located at the Campus Riedberg in Frankfurt am Main. Within the Department of Molecular Sociology
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to technical development where appropriate What we expect: A master's degree in computer science, software engineering, or a related field Experience in solution architecture, systems architecture, or a senior
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azoospermia working with large-scale genomic datasets Functional characterisation of genetic variants in Drosophila utilising CRSIPR/Cas9 Supervising and training of students (PhD, MD, Master
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plus High motivation and interest in developing new technologies for real-world applications Good experimental skills in optical lab or cleanroom A master/PhD degree in physics/chemistry/material science
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Institute for Systems Immunology Your profile Excellent Master in biology, biomedicine, biochemistry or related discipline Fluency in written and spoken English Ability to work independently and
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outputs, including: A return-of-data blueprint Prototype participant reports An evaluated framework for future implementation Your Profile Master's degree and PhD in computational biology, bioinformatics
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degree (diploma, master's or equivalent) in materials science, chemistry or a comparable field Doctorate an advantage Good technical knowledge in the field of active sampling and analysis of airborne
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international collaboration partners Support and administer internal web and Linux servers Your Profile Academic degree (master's and Ph.D.) with a background in computer science, bioinformatics, physics
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, preferably with a strong background in the development of single-cell technologies, CRISPR, high-throughput technologies, and molecular biology. Candidates should have an advanced academic degree (master's and
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) funded by the German Science Foundation (DFG) and Austrian Science Fund (FWF) and led by principal investigators from the Departments of Biology and Chemistry at the University of Konstanz (Germany) and