145 high-performance-computing-postdoc Postdoctoral positions at University of Oxford
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accessibility of the method to enhance user ability to perform analyses in comparative genomics, enable new analyses, and gain new evolutionary insights from data generated using OrthoFinder. The successful
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Oxford’s Department of Orthopaedics (NDORMS) as well as collaborators in Bristol and Cardiff. You should have a PhD/DPhil (or be near completion) in robotics, computer vision, machine learning or a closely
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management of sport injuries, with emphasis on safety rather than performance. You will be part of an interdisciplinary team of pioneering researchers, with the primary aim to develop cutting-edge robotics and
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The Oxford Internet Institute has an exciting opportunity to join the Governance of Emerging Technologies research programme, working under the supervision of Professor Brent Mittelstadt and
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migration, nanoscale assembly, or complex charge-screening processes are still poorly understood despite their critical impact on electronic properties and device performance. The project will provide a
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with different diseases in diverse populations and to identify potential therapeutic targets. This is an exciting opportunity to contribute to a programme of research that assess the causal relevance
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encouraged to apply. The applicant must be able to demonstrate a high level of competence in experimental lab-based research. *Please note that ‘near completion’ means that your PhD thesis has been submitted
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. The post is funded by EPSRC Grant EP/X00967X/1 and is fixed-term for two years. EDOL will establish a world-class Observatory of 2,000 representative GB homes with high resolution, longitudinal, technical
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guiding undergraduate and graduate students; About the project Unperturbed gene expression is vital for correct functioning of cells. RNA polymerase II is the enzyme that transcribes genes into mRNA
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applications. In this role, you will take the lead on an independent project within our broader research programme. Your work will centre on identifying and characterising novel regulators of the immune response