29 computer-programmer-"Multiple"-"Humboldt-Stiftung-Foundation" PhD positions at University of Cambridge
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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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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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evidence the potential to carry out research in theoretical computer science at a high level. Candidates will need to meet all prerequisites for admission to the PhD programme in Computer Science (please
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into the genomics of population structure and speciation in the Malawi cichlid genus Labeotropheus. This post will build on past work in which over 1000 samples of Labeotropheus from multiple species/populations have
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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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The UKRI-funded 5-year project, 'Colombo: Layered Histories in the Global South City', selected for funding by the European Research Council under its 'HORIZON' programme, is recruiting to its
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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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in Brain Injury (HRC) Fellowship Programme, which has been designed to support the research needs across its 5 themes: prevention & education, acute care & monitoring, restoration & rehabilitation
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Biomedical Campus. You will join an exciting research programme investigating fundamental mechanisms of ribosome assembly, translational control and how defects in these processes drive cancer development