10 postdoctoral-human-computer-interaction Postdoctoral positions at MAYNOOTH UNIVERSITY
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Department: Computer Science Vacancy ID: 036182 Closing Date: 20-Jul-2025 Maynooth University is committed to a strategy in which the primary University goals of excellent research and scholarship
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Council (ERC) Consolidator Grant for a project entitled Insurgent Temporalities: Fascism as a Global Anti-Universalist Project (INTEMPO). The postdoctoral researcher will be part of a team undertaking a
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Council (ERC) Consolidator Grant for a project entitled Insurgent Temporalities: Fascism as a Global Anti-Universalist Project (INTEMPO). The postdoctoral researcher will be part of a team undertaking a
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Department: Hamilton Institute Vacancy ID: 036563 Closing Date: 04-Aug-2025 We are seeking a Postdoctoral Researcher to work on the project Thermally-regulated Renewable and Automated DNA Computing
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and outstanding education are interlinked and equally valued. We are seeking an excellent postdoctoral researcher to join the Supramolecular Chemical Systems Group in the Chemistry Department
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outstanding education are interlinked and equally valued. We are seeking a highly motivated Postdoctoral Researcher to join a Research Ireland-funded research project, part of an internationally collaborative
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Functional Compounds”, which is funded by the Marine Institute, Ireland and The EU under the Sustainable Blue Economy Partnership programme. We seek to appoint a postdoctoral researcher for an anticipated 17
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outstanding education are interlinked and equally valued. We are seeking a postdoctoral researcher to work in the role of a chapter scientist for the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change Special Report on
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outstanding education are interlinked and equally valued. We are seeking a postdoctoral researcher to work on the INFORM project. The INFORM project is an Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) funded
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seeks to understand how service users approach, make sense and find meaning in their interactions with these services. The study is funded by the Irish Prison Service. The collective centrality of in