14 parallel-processing-bioinformatics-"DIFFER" PhD research jobs at University of Cambridge in United Kingdom
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the combined themes of human-computer interaction and critical computing. The lab will be exploring the notion of "deceptive by design" on all fronts: social identity cues in the design of LLM-based chatbots
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are investigating the effects of CV format on shortlisting. If you consent to take part in the study, the ARRC team will use information from the shortlisting process to understand the impact of different CV formats
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of CV format on shortlisting. If you consent to take part in the study, the ARRC team will use information from the shortlisting process to understand the impact of different CV formats. The recruiting
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-based reviews, data collection and analysis, written outputs, and the dissemination of research findings to different audiences, including through investor briefings and academic publications. We
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to symmetry breaks in the patterning process. A hybrid modelling approach integrating the dynamics of a core network while utilising a virtual template from experiments for cellular growth and division will be
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PhD students, three Research Assistants, as well as research visitors and interns. We value our team's complementary skills (e.g., differing backgrounds, research approaches, and areas of expertise
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the proportion of individuals within different ethnic groups classified as high risk. - Develop multistate survival models (MSM) to estimate transition parameters between cancer progression states across risk
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combustion experiments and in particular hydrogen and liquid fuels, image processing, and excellent knowledge of turbulent combustion. Appointment at Research Associate level is dependent on having a PhD
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skills. Main duties will include: conduct tissue-mechanical and imaging experiments using early avian embryos; acquire and process data; prepare reagents and samples; optimise protocols; program and debug
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Applications are invited for two Research Assistant / Research Associate posts on the project EQUATE - a project that investigates how Natural Language Processing (NLP) could be made globally more