16 algorithm-development-"Prof"-"Prof" Fellowship positions at UNIVERSITY OF SOUTHAMPTON in United Kingdom
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Research Fellow in Intervention Development to join the Big Data in Health Grou About us Our big data in health team at the University of Southampton is based in the Primary Care Research Centre. We
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the laboratory of Professors Ward and Ober. Their interdisciplinary research program is dedicated to the development of novel antibody-based therapeutics that has led to several therapeutics that are currently in
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Research Fellow in Intervention Development to join the Big Data in Health Group About us Our big data in health team at the University of Southampton is based in the Primary Care Research Centre
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. This role will contribute to the project by: Refining the flow battery design for manufacture and installation in Nepal Developing the control system/BMS for integration with a wider energy management system
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based at the School of Electronics and Computer Science, Southampton. The project is researching, developing and evaluating decentralised algorithms, meta-information data structures and indexing
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. This is for a two-year contract until 30/09/2027 to develop and carry out field trials; survey remote sites; install instruments, data loggers and transmission systems; and analyse and interpret data. We
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child health. The position is based at the MRC Lifecourse Epidemiology Centre, and part of an NIHR-funded programme of research which aims to inform how people can be better supported to plan and prepare
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complex health and social care challenges, particularly in the management of long-term conditions. We combine AI and traditional epidemiology with qualitative methods to develop impactful, real-world
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opportunity for the successful candidate to develop their career in this exciting area in collaboration with some of the leading experts in the UK. The programme seeks to develop mathematical foundations of AI
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molecules. The successful candidate will work in close collaboration with theoretical collaborators (Karl Michael Ziems, Southampton, and Sonia Coriani, DTK) to develop our understanding of satellite state in