
Aktiviere Job-Benachrichtigungen per E-Mail!
Erstelle in nur wenigen Minuten einen maßgeschneiderten Lebenslauf
Überzeuge Recruiter und verdiene mehr Geld. Mehr erfahren
An environmental research institute located in Leipzig, Germany is offering PhD positions focused on advancing water quality information in the Nile River Basin. Candidates will leverage natural language processing and machine learning to analyze pollution-related knowledge and engage with local communities. Applicants must hold a Master's degree in related fields and possess skills in programming and text mining. Join a vibrant research team to tackle global environmental challenges.
The Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research (UFZ) with its 1,100 employees has gained an excellent reputation as an international competence centre for environmental sciences. We are part of the largest scientific organisation in Germany, the Helmholtz association. Our mission: Our research seeks to find a balance between social development and the long-term protection of our natural resources.
In the PhD cohort “In4Nile” - Advancing Water Quality Information in the Nile River Basin, we offer four PhD Positions. In4NILE addresses the limited availability of water quality information in the Nile basin by developing and applying low-cost sampling techniques, mining of existing open (geo)datasets, exploring the use of unstructured data sources through natural language processing, and by developing basin-scale, multi-pollutant spatially explicit water quality models. Building on this framework, the PhD candidate (f/m/x) will leverage the increasing amount of unstructured text data and advances in natural language processing (NLP), large language models (LLMs), and machine learning to extract, analyze, and spatialize pollution-related knowledge. Traditional monitoring approaches, which rely on sparse in situ measurements, offer only a partial view of how citizens and stakeholders perceive the impacts of pollution. In contrast, text sources such as news and institutional documents provide information on how pollution is experienced, debated, and understood by local communities.