32 computer-science-programming-languages-"St"-"St" PhD positions at University of Cambridge in United Kingdom
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Biology, Physics, Applied Mathematics, Computer Science, Bioengineering, Systems Biology or a related field. Proficiency in modelling using differential equations is required. Candidates must have
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Two fully-funded 3-year PhD studentships are available in Neuromorphic and Bio-inspired computing at the interface between control engineering, electrical engineering, computational neuroscience
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project team involving many local and external collaborators. They will be a member of the vibrant and highly research-active Language Technology Lab (http://ltl.mml.cam.ac.uk ) and the larger community
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duties involve supporting computational infrastructure, coordinating with wider spectroscopic project teams and external science users, contributing to documentation and user manuals, and collaborating
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Natural Language Processing (NLP) in the areas of culturally aware NLP or multilingual conversational NLP, and integration of such methods to support language technology in multiple languages
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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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We are seeking a highly motivated Research Assistant/Associate to join EPSRC and industry funded Digital Roads (DR) Prosperity Partnership at the University of Cambridge. This programme is a
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researchers at the CCGE, Oregon Health & Science University (OHSU), and the German Cancer Research Centre (DKFZ). This research is part of a Cancer Research UK International Alliance for Cancer Early Detection
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A position exists, for a Research Assistant/Associate in the Department of Engineering, to work on a European consortium project, UP2030. UP2030 aims to support cities in driving the transitions
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cancer early detection research. The postholder will work closely with researchers from the University of Cambridge, Oregon Health & Science University, the University of Manchester, the German Cancer