19 distributed-algorithm-"Prof" Fellowship research jobs at University of Birmingham in United Kingdom
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The Research Fellow will be supervised by Prof. Christopher Quince (Earlham Institute/Norwich UK), Prof. Iain Chapple (Birmingham), Prof. Moritz Kebschull and Prof. Tariq Iqbal (Birmingham). Their role will
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-edge research in machine learning and automated reasoning for safe algorithmic systems. The Research Fellow will be responsible for developing advanced theory and machine learning algorithms
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. The post holder will join the Chemistry groups led by Prof. Peter Slater, Professor Paul Anderson, and Dr. Phoebe Allan, https://www.birmingham.ac.uk/staff/profiles/chemistry/anderson-paul.aspx https
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signal processing Extensive research experience and scholarship on radar systems and signal processing, ideally for distributed radar sensors, and general knowledge of the effects of oscillator
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the area of crystallisation-driven self-assembly of polyester-based block polymers. The project will be hosted in the group of Prof. Rachel O’Reilly in the School of Chemistry. The post holder will be
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uses, improving the AI and MRI algorithms, and linking them with information from biological studies on tumour tissue. This project harnesses AI to improve diagnosis and clinical decision-making leading
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algorithmic foundations of quantum adversarial machine learning, an emerging field at the intersection of quantum computing and machine learning. It investigates how the unique capabilities of quantum computing
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Survey (BAS). There are also strong connections to the Institute for Data and Artificial Intelligence (IDAI) at UoB. The researcher will work with Dr. Martin Widmann, Dr. Ruth Geen and Prof. Gregor
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engagement workshops, with opportunities for travel to Tanzania. Role Summary Work with the study investigators (Prof. Sam Watson (University of Birmingham), Dr Penelope Hancock (Imperial College London) and
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that those with protected characteristics are treated equally and fairly Informal enquiries to Prof. David Scanlon, Professor of Computational Chemistry, email: d.o.scanlon@bham.ac.uk We believe there is