130 postdoc-computational-biomedical-engineering Postdoctoral positions at University of Oxford
Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
We are looking to appoint a postdoctoral researcher, to work with a group of UK Higher Education Institutions to deliver a programme of mental health research. The work is funded by the Medical
-
have completed, or be close to completing, a PhD/DPhil in a relevant quantitative field such as computational social science, computer science, or cognitive science. They will have a demonstrable track
-
Research Council (NERC), at the Department of Engineering Science (central Oxford). The post is fixed-term for three years. The NERC-funded project will quantify the role of surfactants in the production
-
radiation technology. Prior experience on spin-resolved ARPES or previous experience in setting up and maintain the operation of ARPES spectrometers will be an advantage. Candidates are expected
-
starting as soon as possible. The location of work can be Oxford or CERN. To develop the design and the technology of the vertex detector for LHCb Upgrade II through the TDR phase. The successful candidate
-
anxiety, to work within the established research programme. Substantial hands-on research and professional experience of working with individuals with mental health difficulties, including first-hand
-
research initiative funded by ARIA, titled Aggregating Safety Preferences for AI Systems: A Social Choice Approach. The project operates at the interface of AI safety and computational social choice, and
-
will have or be close to the completion of a PhD in Neuroscience, Psychology or a closely related discipline. With in-depth knowledge of cognitive and computational neuroscience including motivation
-
Metabolism (OCDEM) on studies related to circadian rhythms in population health. This post is part of a large, interdisciplinary research programme, offering attractive opportunities to work across
-
, calcium imaging, optogenetics and/or behavioural methods. The project is part of a broader research programme designed to use cross-species research to uncover mechanisms for memory in both health and