93 algorithm-development-"Prof"-"Washington-University-in-St"-"Prof" Postdoctoral positions at University of Oxford in United Kingdom
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-quality data on spatial and temporal development of hydrogen jets injected into high-pressure and temperature shock-tube environments. You should possess (or be near completion) a relevant PhD/DPhil in
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aims to develop formal frameworks and algorithms for eliciting, aggregating, and analysing stakeholder preferences over risk and safety in AI systems. The Research Assistant will support the development
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on transplant using multimodal medical data. You will be responsible for literature review, data cleaning, model development and implementation. You should possess a relevant PhD (or near completion) in
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developing mathematical algorithms and simulations in MATLAB, in particular with Semidefinite Programming and Sum of Squares and of the analysis and design of feedback control systems using these approaches
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machine learning methods to improve the understanding, treatment and prevention of human disease. The successful candidate will develop novel statistical and machine learning algorithms to address key
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fundamental algorithms for producing policies for rich goal structures in MDPs (e.g. risk, temporal logic, or probabilistic objectives), and modelling robot decision problems using MDPs (e.g. human-robot
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developed goal-sequence generalization task. The project will integrate high-density silicon probe recordings, optogenetics, pharmacology and advanced computational tools to analyse neural algorithms
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endoscopists through a quantitative and qualitative assessment of the mucosal microstructure. You will be responsible for the algorithm development and implementation of the overall system. It is expected
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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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focus on ambitious, ‘blue sky’ research for novel methods development relevant for drug discovery analysis pipelines, trial design and operational efficiency. Led by Professor Chris Holmes, and with