34 assistant-professor-and-health-informatics PhD positions at University of Cambridge
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The Bartlett lab is searching for two Research Associates/Assistants to join our team. The Bartlett Lab studies the developmental and evolutionary processes underpinning plant morphological
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of researchers who conduct cutting-edge research into NLP and AI within the University of Cambridge. Education: An excellent first degree in computer science, engineering or a closely related field Skills and
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We seek a Postdoctoral Research Assistant / Associate (PDRA) to join a multidisciplinary project "Building Shells: Towards a Mechanistic Understanding of Biomineralisation" funded by the Leverhulme
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Two fully-funded 3-year PhD studentships are available in Neuromorphic and Bio-inspired computing at the interface between control engineering, electrical engineering, computational neuroscience, artificial neural networks and bio-inspired robotics: "Rhythmic-reactive regulation for robotic...
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PhD Studentship: Development of Next-Generation High-Performance Titanium Alloy for Aerospace Applications Funder: EPSRC and Rolls-Royce plc Duration: 3.5 years Supervisors: Professor Nick Jones and
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the Engineering Department. The academic supervisor will be Professor Nathan Crilly who has over twenty years' experience researching human behaviour as it relates to users, consumers, inventors and designers
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) culture. This five-year project is led by Professor Sujit Sivasundaram. The successful applicant will join a team of researchers, including postdoctoral fellows and an existing doctoral student
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£19,000 per year. Applications for this PhD studentship should be submitted via the University of Cambridge Applicant Portal www.graduate.study.cam.ac.uk/courses/directory/egegpdpeg , with Professor Duncan
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Duration: 3.5 years (Admission in October 2025, January 2026, or April 2026) Supervisor: Professor Emilie Ringe Closing date: 1 August 2025 Stipend: EPSRC equivalent, £20,780 per annum The overall
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will be based in the Autism Research Centre under the supervision of Professor Simon Baron-Cohen and Dr Carrie Allison. The ARC is a world-class centre that conducts basic research into the causes