38 postdoctoral-image-processing-in-computer-science Postdoctoral positions in United Kingdom
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The Biomedical and Astronomical Signal Processing (BASP ) laboratory at Heriot-Watt University Edinburgh (HWU ), headed by Professor Yves Wiaux, is recruiting a postdoctoral researcher in computational imaging
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into clinical applications (and vice versa). The School consists of eight research departments: Cardiovascular Imaging, Cancer Imaging, Early Life Imaging, Imaging Chemistry & Biology, Biomedical Computing
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are seeking to appoint a postdoctoral research associate as part of a UKRI Future Leader Fellowship funded research programme. The successful candidate will work as part of a team to develop and apply deep
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are seeking to appoint a postdoctoral research associate as part of a UKRI Future Leader Fellowship funded research programme. The successful candidate will work as part of a team to develop and apply deep
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Role: Postdoctoral Research Associate in Fluorescence Imaging of Surgical Tools Grade and Salary: Grade 7 - £37,694 - £47,389 Contract Type: Full Time (1FTE), Fixed Term (6 months - We welcome
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: Pharmaceutical Biophysics, Chemical Biology, Drug Delivery, Pharmacology and Therapeutics, and Clinical Practice and Medication Use. There is a vibrant PhD programme with more than 100 students, and a
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developing and applying deep learning models, particularly in areas such as natural language processing (e.g. use of LLMs), computer vision (e.g. CNNs for image classification), and multimodal data integration
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29 Aug 2025 Job Information Organisation/Company KINGS COLLEGE LONDON Research Field Biological sciences Researcher Profile Recognised Researcher (R2) Established Researcher (R3) Country
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to the clinic The post holder will be based in the Department of Biomedical Computing as part of the School of Biomedical Engineering & Imaging Sciences, King’s College London, a vibrant community of engineers
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using a range of methods including cutting-edge single cell and imaging techniques. Ultimately this information will provide fundamental insights into human biology and may in the future lead to improved