Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Listed
-
Employer
-
Field
-
clarity and tissue compatibility. In the frame of this project, you will work with a team of scientists with backgrounds in chemistry and cell biology as well as with clinical partners on the development
-
of laboratory technicians specializing in chemistry is also based in the analytical center. Your tasks Development of a measurement cell for the online detection of transition metal ions, fluorides, and
-
are explored for applications ranging from magnetoelectronic devices to advanced biomedical systems. A central strength of our group is the development and operation of unique, home-built scanning probe
-
of Basel is an Academic Drug Discovery & Development Center, which comprehensively covers academic drug research throughout pre-clinical and clinical research phases. The Pharmaceutical Biology Group within
-
to high-impact publications. About you You hold a PhD in Biomedical Sciences or related fields. You have a strong interest in epithelial biology, stem cells, and disease modelling. You have experience with
-
focused on translational control in cancer • Drive the development and advance our single-cell ribosome profiling strategies in mouse models of cancer • Contribute to the development and optimization of new
-
well as with clinical partners on the development of an injectable hydrogel system for controlled drug delivery. You will design the hydrogel, tune its properties and subsequently functionalize it to achieve
-
for publication and present findings at international conferences Contribute actively to other projects within the research group Requirements PhD in statistics, epidemiology, or a related discipline Experience in
-
will contribute to the NCCR Separations . Your tasks Development of an advanced testing infrastructure for sorbents and processes in DAC: Planning, design and implementation of novel infrastructure
-
their evolution over cosmological timescales, to the prediction of observable signatures today. These predictions will be tested primarily through gamma-ray, radio, and gravitational-wave observations. The two