52 master-"https:"-"https:"-"https:"-"https:"-"Institute-of-Computer-Science" positions at Nature Careers in Germany
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these needs are, so too is the variety of personalized solutions we offer. Welcome to the UKE. Main tasks Our laboratory broadly studies how brain and body talk to each other in health and disease. Our
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classification procedure („Schwerstverletztenartenverfahren“ (SAV)). Further development of these clinical focus areas is desirable. It is expected to strengthen the main research areas of the Faculty of Medicine
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in vitro work, including work with primary cells isolated from human bone and bone marrow, and characterize these primary cells using various cell biology and molecular biology methods Establish data
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. Strong interest in laboratory automation. Entrepreneurial mindset and behaviour. Experience in isolation and culture of primary T cells from PBMCs is an advantage. Experience with liquid handling systems
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and research contexts. Ensuring safety in handling radioactive materials and the use of X-rays is a primary responsibility, and an appointment as radiation protection officer is foreseen. A major
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of the research unit FOR5889 “dangerhep” recently funded by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG), including also outstanding principal investigators from the Universities of Düsseldorf, Stuttgart
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such as Lustre, BeeGFS, DAOS, etc. Your profile You have a bachelor's or master's degree (or equivalent) in computer science, mathematics, or a related technical field from a university with internationally
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written for a non-specialist, which explains the main goals of the research work a research pre-proposal of no more than three pages total including all references, figures, and tables, written for a
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analyzing the impacts of global change on freshwater ecosystem functioning, community composition, food-web structure and biodiversity. Experiments investigating how benthic or planktonic primary producers
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! The position is located in the research group of Prof. Dr. Stefan Schlatt with a main focus on testicular stem cells. The project is embedded in the DFG-funded Collaborative Research Centre 1748 ‘Principles