24 assistant-professor-computer-science-and-data Postdoctoral positions at University of London
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You Will have a PhD (or close to completion) in health data science, bioinformatics, computer science, computational biology, or a closely related discipline, with demonstrated experience in analysing
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researchers in the preparation and analysis of data. The Research Associate will be supported by a multidisciplinary internationally renowned team with diverse expertise including in health data science
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researcher to work in collaboration with and under the supervision of Professor Michelle West to realise the objectives of a research programme into Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) mechanisms of transformation and
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dedicated to ground-breaking multi-disciplinary research in digital and data science, including artificial intelligence (AI). DERI offers an outstanding research environment including a dedicated physical
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” funded by Korea Institute for Advancement of Technology (KIAT), led by Dr Changjae Oh. The objective of the postdoctoral research assistant position is to investigate and advance vision-language object
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About the role We are seeking an enthusiastic Postdoctoral Researcher to join the School of Engineering and Materials Science at Queen Mary University of London. The successful candidate will
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monitoring, reporting and verification; and development of data and analysis products for clients. All of these elements will involve client and sector engagement. About You You will have a PhD in the relevant
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) semiconductors and devices. The primary aim is to develop next-generation ultra-low-energy consumption semiconductor devices to significantly reduce the power consumption of data centres and computers. Key
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common complex human genetic diseases using genomics and other omics data within large-scale health datasets. The postholder will contribute to the objectives and development of a research programme funded
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osteoarthritis. The post-holder will conduct the research as part of a team and under the supervision of Professor Francesco Dell’Accio and Dr Suzanne Eldridge. The work involves in vitro assays of chondrogenesis