50 computational-modelling Postdoctoral positions at University of Oxford in United Kingdom
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the Department of Engineering Science at the University of Oxford. The post is funded by the Oxford Martin Programme on Circular Battery Economies. It is fixed term up to December 2027. You will undertake
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language processing (large language models) to investigate the brain computations supporting planning in humans, and how this can go awry in psychosis. What We Offer As an employer, we genuinely care about our
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project to develop a systematic framework for reconstructing the evolutionary histories of pathogens. The role involves using viral sequence data and models of sequence evolution to investigate both
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We are seeking a talented and motivated researcher to join the Mead Group to contribute to a major research programme, focused on understanding and preventing disease progression in
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lowland river chemistry. Ultimately, these experiments will be used to parameterise calcite precipitation rate equations and empirical rate constants to inform catchment-scale modelling of ERW practices and
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of a wider programme of work to establish that membraneless organelles, biological liquid droplets, are effectively regions of organic solvent, suspended inside cells and that the properties of each
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scientific oversight from Oxford Principal Investigators and GSK scientists, the centre will initially focus on some of the following thematic areas: • Decision analysis under model misspecification
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to reconstruct the tree-of-life on Earth, it allows us to reveal how biological function has evolved and is distributed on this tree, and it is the foundation that enables us to use model organisms
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of 24 months. The project aim’s to develop new constitutive models to describe the mechanical behaviour of Thermoplastic Elastomers (TPEs). These polymers are increasingly being developed as a
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computational modelling using artificial neural networks. It brings together teams led by Mohamady El-Gaby (Oxford Experimental Psychology), Matthew Nour (Oxford Psychiatry), Rick Adams (UCL), and Maria Eckstein