14 parallel-computing-numerical-methods Postdoctoral research jobs at King's College London
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. About the role You will work closely with Prof. Hanna Kienzler, Prof. Stephani Hatch, and Dr Rebecca Rhead as part of the Centre’s ‘Marginalised Communities’ programme. This involves partnering with Black
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informatics experience in large scale academic projects and/or industry environment. Strong grasp of study design, power calculations, and statistical methods, with scientific rigour in planning and
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equivalent experience. Knowledge of and interest in research at the intersection of ethnicity and health. Strong experience in qualitative research methods (including research ethics, interviewing, and
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, state-of-the-art laboratories, high-performance computing, and industry collaboration through the London Institute for Healthcare Engineering. About the role We are looking for a highly motivated
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of Biomedical Engineering and Imaging Sciences is a cutting-edge research and teaching School dedicated to development, translation and clinical application within medical imaging and computational modelling
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responsible for the development and implementation of a case study in a US or European city (to be confirmed), using ethnographic and qualitative case study methods under a cross-cultural research design
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well as clinical phenotyping in participants. The work will involve close collaboration with other team members, driving the programme on aetiopathology of neuropsychiatric disease forward. It will also involve
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. Department: Res Dept of Biomedical Computing. Contact details:Dr. Rachel Sparks. rachel.sparks@kcl.ac.uk Location: St Thomas Hospital. Category: Research. About Us We are seeking experts in medical image
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, Science and Technology Studies (completed, or to be completed before post start date), or a cognate field. 2. Experience of qualitative archival or interview-based research methods in a relevant field
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novel therapeutic strategies, and for anticipating the evolutionary trajectories of other viruses with pandemic potential. Our current research programme is structured around three central themes