23 web-programmer-"Prof"-"Sun-Yat-Sen-University" PhD positions at University of Cambridge
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, artificial neural networks and bio-inspired robotics: "Rhythmic-reactive regulation for robotic locomotion" (Supervisor: Prof Fulvio Forni) will apply techniques from nonlinear control and optimisation
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considered. Qualifications/Skills PhD degree in a programme relevant to human-computer interaction and/or critical computing, ideally in Computer Science, Industrial Engineering, Interaction Design, or a
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to consider these as part of your application. Please submit your application by midnight on the closing date. If you have any questions about this vacancy of a technical nature, please contact Prof. E
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. Click the 'Apply' button below to register an account with our recruitment system (if you have not already) and apply online. Applicants should contact Prof Amanda Prorok for further information. http
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project was selected for funding by the European Research Council (ERC) and is led by Prof. Anna Korhonen. The goal of the project is to investigate the challenges in the development of globally inclusive
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letter (Max 3 sides, including proposed research project) to be submitted to Dimple Patel, dp692@medschl.cam.ac.uk by July 29th 2025. Informal enquiries should be directed to Prof Menna Clatworthy
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and informal situations. Present findings in academic conferences and community forums. Plan and manage own research workload in accordance with project timelines and deliverables. Commit to ongoing
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equitable. This UKRI Frontier project was selected for funding by the European Research Council (ERC) and is led by Prof. Anna Korhonen. The goal of the project is to investigate the challenges in
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Applications are invited for a Postdoctoral Research Associate position in cellular biophysics in the group of Prof. Ewa Paluch. The Paluch lab studies cellular morphogenesis combining cell and
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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