33 professor-computer-science-"https:" "https:" "https:" "https:" "Kyoto university" Postdoctoral positions at University of Oslo
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postdoctoral fellowship is available at the Department of Immunology, Institute of Clinical Medicine, University of Oslo. The position will be located in the lab of Professor Ludvig M. Sollid and will be
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informatics. It is expected that all members of the centre contribute to the general activities and collaborations within RITMO. The researchers have access to state-of-the-art facilities in sound/video
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world-leading competence in musicology, psychology and informatics. It is expected that all members of the centre contribute to the general activities and collaborations within RITMO. The researchers have
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, statistics, machine learning, mathematics, data science, computer science or another relevant field. Doctoral dissertation must be submitted for evaluation by the closing date. Appointment is dependent
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, demographic modelling, Bayesian hierarchical models and/or modelling with multiple data streams • Experience with data science and biodiversity informatics, in particular handling of scientific collection
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fellow, you will be working on the NORCIE project alongside Professors Craig Parsons and Bent Sofus Tranøy at ARENA, as well as partners in the project at the Department of Economics, UiO, the Chr
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to the Faculty of Social Sciences’ PhD programme within relevant disciplines in the social sciences or the humanities. The master’s degree must be of high quality (grade A or B) and within a specialisation of
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experience in advanced molecular biology and computational analysis Successfully completed post-doctoral period with a strong publication record in peer-reviewed journals Documented research experience in
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regulation, active matter physics, and computational biology. The post doc will: Explore the role of known gene-regulatory mechanisms for healthy embryo development. Identify novel gene-regulatory mechanism
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). This position will be affiliated to philosophy at the Department of Philosophy, Classics, History of Art and Ideas (IFIKK) and the research group Science and Democracy (SciDem), led by Professor Cathrine Holst