Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Country
-
Program
-
Employer
- ; University of Exeter
- Stockholm University
- Technical University of Denmark
- Eindhoven University of Technology
- NTNU - Norwegian University of Science and Technology
- The Norwegian School of Sport Sciences
- University of Amsterdam
- University of Groningen
- ; University of Plymouth
- Aalborg University
- Chalmers University of Technology
- Delft University of Technology
- ERIM
- Leibniz
- Lulea University of Technology
- Max Planck Institute for the Study of Crime, Security and Law, Freiburg
- RMIT University
- Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
- Umeå University
- University of Sheffield
- University of Stavanger
- Wageningen University and Research Center
- 12 more »
- « less
-
Field
-
Irène Curie Fellowship No Department(s) Industrial Engineering and Innovation Sciences Reference number V39.7542 Job description Are you passionate about exploring the intersection of human
-
human placental development in disease, and developmental programming effects mediated by the placenta. Disease-derived human trophoblast organoids will be established and further developed to incorporate
-
important since incorrect formation of the neural tube leads to developmental defects that account for some of the most common and severe birth defects in humans. Such defects, including anencephaly and spina
-
also try using AI systems to support exploratory anticipation and prospection activities—developing AI systems that help generate technomoral scenarios with a range of salient features, for human
-
to no intentional human support. Considerations surrounding unowned cat populations are well-documented and span multiple fields of research including animal welfare, conservation and public health. Despite the well
-
serious impacts on ecosystem services, marine biodiversity and human health. This position will focus on two species: the dinoflagellate Alexandrium pseudogonyaulax, which is currently spreading from west
-
possible extension of six months To be eligible for this scholarship you must: Have strong social research (quantitative/qualitative) AND/OR humanities research skills Meet RMIT University’s entry
-
to study human biofluids as a nano-chemical fingerprint of patients’ nutritional and life-style behavior, to identify nano-chemical biomarkers of Healthy Cognitive Ageing (PhD position 1) and Subjective
-
face pressed against a stationary face. They leak a tiny amount of sealed gas, a sub-micron thin layer, to make sure the faces do not contact and wear out. Conduct cutting-edge experiments to understand
-
further assess the impact of muscle pressure on human spindles. The project will therefore add significantly to our understanding of how we perceive our muscles’ mechanical state. Moreover, advanced