187 fully-funded-phd-program-computer-science-eth Postdoctoral positions at University of Oxford
Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Listed
-
Field
-
About the Role We are seeking an experienced and highly motivated senior postdoctoral researcher in computational biology. The successful candidate will join a multi-disciplinary team working in
-
methods suitable for legged systems in physically-realistic simulated environments and on real robots. You should hold or be close to completion of a PhD/DPhil in robotics, computer science, machine
-
About the role We are seeking a highly motivated, a postdoctoral researcher in computational biology. We investigate how immune cells interact with their environment in the human gastrointestinal
-
cathodes within the group of Professor Saiful Islam in the Department of Materials at the University of Oxford. The research programme at Oxford will investigate structural, redox, transport, and interface
-
Mobility Reading Group led by Nobuko Yoshida. The successful candidate will be located in the Department of Computer Science Reporting to Professor Nobuko Yoshida, the post holder will be responsible
-
possess a PhD/DPhil in Engineering, Computer Science or other related field, (with the possibility to underfill at Grade 6 (£34,982 - £40,855 p.a.) if candidate holds a relevant degree and is working on PhD
-
cells containing biological components. Find out more about the Langton research group here About you Applicants must hold a PhD in Chemistry, Chemical Biology or a related area (or be close to completion
-
on qualifications and relevant skills acquired and will also be determined by the funding available. About you You should hold a PhD/DPhil, or be close to completion, of a relevant PhD/DPhil with a proven record of
-
at: About you Applicants must hold a PhD in Biochemistry, Chemical Biology, Physics, Engineering or a relevant subject area, (or be close to completion) prior to taking up the appointment. You will be
-
depending on funding. The Oxford Ion Trap Quantum Computing group currently hosts one of the world’s highest performance networked quantum computing demonstrators, capable of remote Bell-pair production