82 parallel-and-distributed-computing-phd positions at University of Newcastle in United Kingdom
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support in areas such as distributed systems, programming, artificial intelligence, or related computing disciplines. Attributes and Behaviour Strong communication and interpersonal skills, capable
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for Research Associate • PhD in any related areas, preferable in an interdisciplinary topic (e.g. Computational Neuroscience, or Biomedical Engineering) Newcastle University is a global University where
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interventions in type 1 diabetes complicated by impaired awareness of hypoglycaemia – including the My Hypo Compass programme developed within Newcastle University. You will play a critical role as a named
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, Engineering, or a related discipline (a minimum of 2:1 undergraduate qualification) A Meng, MSc or PhD in Computer Science, Electrical and Electronic Engineering, Mechatronics, Control Engineering, Physics
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accounting; corporate governance; non financial reporting (ESG/sustainability reporting); financial management; and business case studies. Applicants should hold a PhD in a relevant accounting discipline or be
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-Computer Interaction research group, based in the School of Computing at Newcastle University. The research assistant / associate will report to Prof. David Kirk (Professor of Human-Centred Design). You will
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the post may be made to Dr Gill Norman (gill.norman@ncl.ac.uk) or Dr Gurdeep Sagoo (gurdeep.sagoo@ncl.ac.uk ). Key Accountabilities Contribute to the leadership of the TAR programme, delivered by a
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and Language Sciences, including our Speech and Language Sciences subject area. The postholder should have a PhD in a relevant discipline e.g. Speech and Language Sciences, Education, Psychology
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, and citizen science? Join us in leading an exciting programme to engage schools and coastal communities with their marine heritage. You'll co-create citizen science initiatives, innovate inclusive
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work on the INSTINCT-MB programme, which brings together teams based at Newcastle University, The Institute of Cancer Research and University College London. The programme will generate a wide range of