Hátha vkinek van postdoc állása.
Üdv,
Tj
---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: Amirhossein Sadeghi Manesh <Amir(a)math.ku.dk>
Date: Wed, Aug 14, 2019 at 11:02 AM
Subject: Postdoc possibilities
To: jtoth(a)math.bme.hu <jtoth(a)math.bme.hu>
Dear Janos Toth,
We met several times in different conferences (first time was in Mackie2017
in Budapest, and the last time was in Bern). I finished my PhD previous
year and now I'm doing a short postdoc until the end of this December so
now I'm looking for a new postdoc. I thought of writing to you and ask if
you have any postdoc position or by any chance aware of any. I attached my
CV to this email and wrote a bit about myself (the link to my thesis is
also at the end of this email).
I finished my PhD and a short 2 months postdoc at the end of October 2018
and now I'm spending another 8 months postdoc with my PhD supervisor (1st
of May 2019-31st of December 2019). I studied my B.Sc. and M.Sc. in pure
mathematics (specialized to algebraic geometry in master with thesis title:
"*Resolution of singularities and Hironaka's theorem*"). Then I studied my
PhD in applied algebraic geometry in biology under supervision of Elisenda
Feliu, and my PhD thesis title was "*algebraic tools in the study of
multistationarity of chemical reaction networks*". In my thesis I used
parallel computation and programming with Maple and Python (I am using C++
and Julia during my current postdoc too). I introduced algorithms which
solve the questions of interests faster than former existing algorithms, or
need less memory. I used not only computational algebraic geometry, but
also stochastic, statistics, numerical analysis, linear algebra and graph
theory. Another thing about me is that I always like to participate
conferences and use whatever new things I learn in the talks to attack the
challenging questions in the topics that I work on them, even if they sound
irrelevant at the beginning. As an example you can see the use of the
Kac-Rice formula to do what CAD (cylindrical algebraic decomposition) can't
do in algebraic geometry in practice. I also prefer to have applications
for what I do and that was the reason I didn't continue my PhD only in the
pure side and tried a topic with application in biology and chemistry, and
you can see examples in my thesis such as gene-regulationary networks (like
LacI-TetR), n-site phosphorylation or HK networks which have application in
signal trasnduction passways and memory role in Eukaryotic and Prekaryotic
cells respectively. Links to my PhD thesis and the two first papers of my
thesis are below. A preliminary draft version of the third paper can be
found in my thesis text. But the results are generalized in the current
postdoc which are not in that draft. I also worked on speeding up the
Monte-Carlo integrations needed in this work.
Text:
http://web.math.ku.dk/noter/filer/phd18ahs.pdf
Cover:
http://web.math.ku.dk/noter/filer/omslag/phd18ahs.pdf
1st paper:
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.aam.2019.02.006
2nd paper:
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11538-019-00612-1
Thanks for your time and reading my email
Sincerely
--
AmirHosein Sadeghimanesh
Finished PhD in "Applied Algebraic Geometry in Biology"
Postdoc in "Mathematics of Chemical Reaction Networks Theory"
Under supervision of Elisenda Feliu
University of Copenhagen
--
Recently published:
https://www.springer.com/gp/book/9781493986415
<https://www.springer.com/gp/book/9781493986415>
*Az Érintő legfrissebb, 2019. NYÁRI** száma:*
http://www.ematlap.hu
Olvasd, terjeszd, írd!
https://scholar.google.hu/citations?user=_6V4DdoAAAAJ