13 associate-professor-computer-science Postdoctoral positions at King's College London
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About us The Department of Informatics is looking to recruit a Postdoctoral Research Associate. We are a globally recognised center of excellence in artificial intelligence, robotics, and computer
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Job id: 119867. Salary: £44,355 - £46,671 per annum, including London Weighting Aloowance. Posted: 14 July 2025. Closing date: 18 August 2025. Business unit: Social Science & Public Policy
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) comprises Chemistry, Engineering, Informatics, Mathematics, and Physics – all departments highly rated in research activities and a wide-ranging portfolio of education programmes. Celebrating diversity and
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two-year (24 months), full-time (1.0 FTE) position as Postdoctoral Research Associate (PDRA) in Urban Studies. The post will be based in the research team of Professor Katie Meehan at KCL’s Strand
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studies, science and technology studies (STS), and philosophy our project will critically explore regulatory approaches and their unfolding impacts in three regions: Europe (France/Greece/Ireland/UK), West
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for more information. About you To be successful in this role, we are looking for candidates to have the following skills and experience: Essential criteria 1. PhD degree in Engineering, Computer Science
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Job id: 119545. Salary: £44,355 - £47,882 per annum inclusive of London Weighting Allowance. Posted: 09 July 2025. Closing date: 20 July 2025. Business unit: Faculty of Life Sciences & Medicine
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of Biomedical Engineering and Imaging Sciences is a cutting-edge research and teaching School dedicated to development, translation and clinical application within medical imaging and computational modelling
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About Us King’s College London is one of the world’s leading universities whose School of Cancer & Pharmaceutical Sciences unites basic, translational and clinical expertise to accelerate progress
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for intervention in causal pathways. Interventions allow the shift from describing ‘associations’ between the biology and clinical outcome to discussing ‘cause and effect’, with the prospect of clinical trial design