12 high-performance-computing-postdoc Fellowship positions at The University of Southampton
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We are looking for a Research Fellow to join the Tony Davies High Voltage Laboratory (TDHVL) at our Highfield Campus to work on a new project on Additive Manufacturing for the High Voltage Industry
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PhD in HCI, Computer Science, or Related? Interested in innovating interactive technologies to help #makeNormalBetter for all? Excellent and committed researcher? Come join the WellthLab
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responsible for maintaining high quality research procedures and will work as part of the team and liaise with three recruiting sites in setting up the study, monitoring participant recruitment, data collection
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foundation in fundamental biofilm research, microbial community assembly and manipulation, and biofilm reactor operation is essential. Experience in metabolic engineering is desirable. The successful candidate
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. You will collaborate closely with the team to deliver high-impact projects funded by the School for Primary Care Research (SPCR), National Institute for Health Research (NIHR), and UK Research and
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and environmental challenges. As a world-leading, research-intensive university, with a strong and high-quality educational offering, we are renowned for our innovation and enterprise and are within
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the perspective of the generation and propagation of (Fisher) information. You will join a major Programme sponsored by the UK’s Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council - becoming a member of a broader
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. Responsibilities will include: systematic reviewing and evidence synthesis, project management (coordination and reporting), maintaining high quality research procedures, qualitative and quantitative data collection
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demonstrating the impact of the LifeLab programme. A specific focus will be evaluating the young researcher training programme (YRTP), exploring its potential long-term impacts on young people's lives and
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and translation. You will be based in the School of Electronics and Computer Science (ECS), working alongside an interdisciplinary team led by Dr. Shelly Vishwakarma (s.vishwakarma@soton.ac.uk), in