PhD Position: Digital Biomarkers for Type-2 Diabetes Management at School of Medicine (m/w/d)
Universität St. Gallen
Publication date:
18 June 2024Workload:
100%Contract type:
Unlimited employment- Place of work:St.Gallen
Technological advances in wearables and biosensors are rapidly transforming how we monitor and manage diabetes, moving beyond finger pricking and blood picks. Data from wearables and smartphones hold massive potential to provide personalized insights into blood glucose levels and to inform decisions about diet, exercise, in everyday life and at scale. What are the latest technological developments across wearables and biosensors, and how can we leverage them for digital biomarker development in diabetes management?
The CSS Health Lab is a research laboratory at the Centre for Digital Health Interventions, a joint initiative of the University of St. Gallen and ETH Zurich, dedicated to various aspects of digital health and supported by CSS, one of the largest Swiss health insurance companies. Given the increasing health and economic burden of non-communicable diseases, the lab aims to make prevention measurable, actionable, and accountable, and to make preventative care successful.
Your tasks
To strengthen the CSS Health Lab, we offer the following position at Med-HSG in St. Gallen under the supervision of Mia Jovanova, PhD, Scientific Director of the CSS Health Lab and Postdoctoral Research in Digital Biomarkers for Healthy Longevity at the School of Medicine, University of St. Gallen, with Prof. Dr. Tobias Kowatsch and Prof. Dr. Elgar Fleisch being co-supervisors: Research Assistant to obtain a Ph.D. in Management, at HSG.
You must be eligible for a Ph.D. at the University of St. Gallen, and you will work on developing novel digital monitoring biomarkers for diabetes management using passive sensing wearable data (e.g., V02max, blood pressure, heart rate variability) and smartphones. As part of our team, you take direct project responsibility. You will lead machine learning pipelines for feature engineering and algorithm development and validation using time series data.
You must have a strong technical background in pre-processing longitudinal, time series data from wearables, and statistically modeling time series data using machine learning methods. You will work in a highly interdisciplinary team at the intersection of computer science, behavioral medicine, clinical psychology and business innovation.
Employment conditions, compensation and benefits are attractive and based on the guidelines of HSG. The average duration for obtaining a Ph.D. is 3.5-4 years.
Your profile
You should meet the following requirements:
- Strong expertise in pre-processing and modeling time series data from wearables using machine learning.
- Strong expertise in Python, R, or similar software/ languages and ability to independently run pre-processing and machine learning pipelines for wearable data.
- A master's degree in computer science or engineering, with a GPA (Grade Point Average) of at least 5.0 (GPA of 2.0 and better in Germany and Austria) in combination with a strong experience in wearables and biosensor technology.
- Strong interest in metabolic health, healthy longevity, health economics, and technology-based innovation.
- Interest in applied research projects, start-ups, or venture capital, as well as prior work experience in the digital health industry is advantageous.
- Self-confident appearance and high conceptual and communication skills, especially regarding presenting research results to a broad and interdisciplinary audience
- Profound knowledge (written/oral) in English and German (advantageous).
"A place where knowledge is created" - As one of Europe's leading universities of economics and business administration, the University of St.Gallen (HSG), Switzerland, is committed to the education of over 9800 students. The HSG is one of the largest employers in the region and provides an attractive and innovative environment for more than 3300 researchers, educators and professional staff.
Contact
Universität St. Gallen