14 computer-algorithm-"Prof"-"Prof"-"Prof" PhD positions at University of Cambridge in United Kingdom
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Fixed-term: The funds for this post are available for 3 years. A doctoral studentship is available in the forthcoming Aspirational Computing Lab (February 2026) in the Department of Computer
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Fixed-term: The funds for this post are available for 12 months A position is available for a Postdoctoral Research Associate (Postdoc) in the forthcoming Aspirational Computing Lab in
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application of computational tools for the early detection and deconstruction of chromosomal instability in cancer” For further information about the research group, including their most recent publications
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the field of Computational Morphodynamics in plants. The work will be within the ERC-funded project RESYDE (https://resydeproject.org ) with the aim of building a virtual flower using multi-level data and
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engineering, computational neuroscience, artificial neural networks and bio-inspired robotics: "Rhythmic-reactive regulation for robotic locomotion" (Supervisor: Prof Fulvio Forni) will apply techniques from
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to develop novel, bio-inspired neural networks that flexibly and robustly control locomotion in multi-limbed robots. "Self-organised clocks for reliable spiking computation" (Supervisor: Prof Timothy O'Leary
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developments such as novel algorithms to support logistics operations, novel automation approaches or the design and development of new digital support tools for logistics providers. Significant flexibility
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The Centre for Doctoral Training in Nanoscience and Nanotechnology (NanoDTC) at the University of Cambridge invites applications for its 3.5-year interdisciplinary PhD programme. The programme
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to the launch of the Bloomberg Cambridge University Corporate Bond Index later in 2025 and the delivery of the ongoing research programme related to the index project. The successful candidate will undertake desk
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technologies, bulk and single-cell RNA-sequencing, flow cytometry, multiplex immunofluorescence, and standard molecular biology and biochemistry techniques. A computational component may also be available