89 algorithm-development-"Prof"-"Prof" Postdoctoral positions at University of Oxford in United Kingdom
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professional development opportunities Before submitting an application, please review the full details of this post including the selection criteria by opening the 'Job Description' attachment below. To submit
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Postdoctoral Research Associate in Forest Resilience, Climate Change, and Human Health in the Amazon
Change Institute, School of Geography and the Environment, University of Oxford. The post holder will have responsibility for developing research on the ecology, climate change and remote sensing
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will test hypotheses and analyse scientific data from a variety of sources, reviewing and refining working hypotheses as appropriate, develop ideas for generating research income, and present detailed
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holder will use existing thermal remote sensing data, along with newly developed thermal models, to constrain the variability of Europa’s surface temperatures, properties and activity properties ahead
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The post holder will develop computational models of learning processes in cortical networks. The research will employ mathematical modelling and computer simulation to identify synaptic plasticity
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of extreme events. New modelling capability will be developed to quantify impacts of extreme events on surface melt of ice shelves. These advances will bring a step change over current knowledge of extremes in
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, operations research, computer science, mathematical finance, or a related field, the successful candidate will demonstrate the ability to develop independent research ideas and contribute to advancing our
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challenges, from reducing our carbon emissions to developing vaccines during a pandemic. The Department of Psychiatry is based on the Warneford Hospital site in Oxford – a friendly, welcoming place of work
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researcher will fabricate and characterize devices, perform low-temperature experiments using radio-frequency readout circuits, and collaborate with theorists to develop novel experiments for studying quantum
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and how it evolves. In particular we focus on the evolution and evolvability of vertebral counts, and we use various species of Lake Malawi cichlids as our model organism. To address these questions, we