41 parallel-processing-bioinformatics-"Multiple" Fellowship research jobs at University of Birmingham
Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
inversion of gravity gradient data, contribute to the development of data interfaces for multi-modal sensor integration, and perform advanced data processing and inference to support subsurface imaging and
-
project will focus on scaling-up the technology and transferring existing knowledge of this process from the University of Birmingham to Salinity Solutions, where it can be commercialised and accelerate
-
to developing new protocols and techniques Ability to assess resource requirements and use resources effectively Understanding of and ability to contribute to broader management/administration processes
-
, confirmatory factor analysis) Ability to assess resource requirements and use resources effectively Understanding of and ability to contribute to broader management/administration processes Contribute
-
to developing new ones Ability to assess resource requirements and use resources effectively Understanding of and ability to contribute to broader management/administration processes Contribute to the planning
-
to broader management/administration processes Contribute to the planning and organising of the research programme and/or specific research project Co-ordinate own work with others to avoid conflict
-
Language Processing (NLP) with a focus on large language models, deep learning, and multi-modal machine learning. The researcher will work on the project KAMAL Health: Knowledge-Augmented Multi-Modal Arabic LLMs
-
to contribute to broader management/administration processes Contribute to the planning and organising of the research programme and/or specific research project Co-ordinate own work with others to avoid conflict
-
train other personnel on operation of this equipment Excellent writing skills and record of success in published papers Informal enquiries to Prof. Rachel K. O’Reilly, email: r.oreilly@bham.ac.uk We
-
Wellcome Leap programme awarded to the University of Birmingham to study Untangling Addiction. Our project, entitled “Predicting persistent opioid usage after surgery: Integrating multi-omics, neurobiology