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. The overall goal of this PhD is the development of advanced data models to extract qualitative and quantitative information from electrochemical data. These data models will improve the state-of-the-art in (bio
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(100%) PhD in the field of Molecular and Computational Neurogenomics Position We are a highly motivated international team of researchers at the Molecular Neurogenomics group (Jordanova Lab) and the
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of computer science, data science and artificial intelligence Position You will actively work on the preparation and defense of a doctoral dissertation on the development of new data science and artificial intelligence
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ambient conditions. The role of the PhD student is to develop and apply novel low-dose electron microscopy techniques and perform a quantitative analysis of the obtained data. The specific job description
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and ecological morphology, behavior and genomics of cichlids Position You will work actively on the preparation and defence of a PhD thesis on functional trade-offs, behavior and genomics related
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research team of Prof. Verstraeten aims to further elucidate and therapeutically target the disease mechanisms underlying aortopathy and skeletal dysplasia. This PhD project is part of BREAK-OUT, an ERC
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. However, conventional MRI is subjective and has limitations in terms of image resolution and quality. The principal goal of this PhD project is to apply and evaluate a super-resolution reconstruction (SRR
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Mathematics: Statistics Position You will work actively on the preparation and defence of a PhD thesis in statistics and data science. Possible topics are causal machine learning, causal inference, robust
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%) doctoral scholarship holder in the field of signal enhancement strategies for photoelectrochemical sensors for nucleic acid-based sequences. The overall goal of this PhD is the development of strategies
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for biomedical applications. In order to strive for academic excellence driven by international collaboration, this project will be a joint PhD, supervised by Prof. Karolien De Wael (A-PECS) and Prof. John Mack