27 algorithm-development-"Multiple" Postdoctoral research jobs at University of Cambridge in United Kingdom
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Phenomenology. Members of the group with interest in this area include Professor Ben Allanach and Professor Maria Ubiali. Duties will include developing and conducting individual and collaborative research
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University Department of Psychiatry, clinical institutions such as Cambridgeshire and Peterborough NHS Foundation Trust, and with a secondment to industry (Akrivia Health) to advance science and develop common
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in Cambridge. The mission statement of the group is "developing statistical methods to use genetic variation to answer clinically important questions about disease aetiology and prevention". The three
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. This will require the application of a range of techniques, from in-vitro biochemistry to novel, next-generation sequencing approaches. Most skills can be acquired and developed throughout the post, offering
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be able to communicate material of a technical nature and be able to build internal and external contacts. You may be asked to assist in the supervision of student projects, the development of student
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candidate will work with Professor Guilio Del Zanna on producing advanced atomic models. This post offers an excellent opportunity to contribute to a high-profile project focused on the development
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., musicology or medieval studies) or have evidence that the PhD will be completed by the starting date and show a developing profile of publications. The successful candidate will be capable of engaging with
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the starting date and show a developing profile of publications. The successful candidate will be capable of engaging with sophisticated conceptual problems relevant to the project. Applicants will ideally
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well as the wider academic community: for example, by collaborating or engaging with policy, charity, or stakeholder organisations; by developing or maintaining open-source and/or community resources and/or by
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at the Department of Chemistry at the University of Cambridge (https://www.ch.cam.ac.uk/group/michaelides ). The projects will involve the development and application of approaches for treating complex intermolecular