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Two fully-funded 3-year PhD studentships are available in Neuromorphic and Bio-inspired computing at the interface between control engineering, electrical engineering, computational neuroscience
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A PhD studentship is available to work on Logistics automation. The student associate will work in the Intelligent Logistics Group within the Distributed Information and Automation Laboratory (DIAL
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and an Industrial supervisor at Jaguar Land Rover (JLR). It falls within the remit of the Cambridge Engineering Design Centre (EDC), but interactions with other groups are expected, across and beyond
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environmental terms, this multiply-colonised and repeatedly-engineered city is built in a wetland without a significant natural harbour; 2) In social terms, in a heavily nationalised state, the city has resisted
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Applications are invited for a PhD studentship on the project EQUATE - a project that investigates how Natural Language Processing (NLP) could be made globally more equitable. This UKRI Frontier
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PhD Studentship: Development of Next-Generation High-Performance Titanium Alloy for Aerospace Applications Funder: EPSRC and Rolls-Royce plc Duration: 3.5 years Supervisors: Professor Nick Jones and
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The Managers of the Autism Research Trust Fund invite applications for a fully funded PhD studentship in autism research in the Department of Psychiatry, commencing in October 2025. This studentship
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The British Museum and the University of Cambridge are pleased to announce the availability of a fully funded Collaborative doctoral studentship from October 2025 under the AHRC's Collaborative Doctoral Partnership consortium (https://www.ahrc-cdp.org ). This project aims to explore wider...
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catalytically active metals to drive chemical reactions with light [3-4]. The specific goals of this PhD project are to 1) understand how plasmonic Mg nanoparticles and their surface oxide layer attract and
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Applications are invited for a fully-funded 3-year PhD studentship based in the Department of Clinical Neurosciences at the University of Cambridge under the supervision of Professor Stephen Price