32 computer-science-programming-languages "Nova School of Science and Technology/FCT UNL" PhD positions at University of Cambridge
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project team involving many local and external collaborators. They will be a member of the vibrant and highly research-active Language Technology Lab (http://ltl.mml.cam.ac.uk ) and the larger community
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One Research Associate position exists in the data-driven mechanics Laboratory at the Department of Engineering. The role is to set up a machine learning framework to predict the plastic behaviour
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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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engineering. Applicants are expected to have (or be close to obtaining) a PhD in information engineering, computer science, civil engineering or cognate discipline. They should also have good written and spoken communication
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The Department of Engineering at the University of Cambridge is offering a Postdoctoral Researcher position to work on collaborative projects with Dr. Hong Ge at the Computational and Biological
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duties involve supporting computational infrastructure, coordinating with wider spectroscopic project teams and external science users, contributing to documentation and user manuals, and collaborating
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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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Integrative Toxicology Training Partnership (ITTP) is a national PhD training programme for capacity building in Toxicology and related disciplines. The safe development of new drugs, materials, chemicals and
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the field of green computing focusing on quantifying and reducing the environmental impacts of computational science. The tools and frameworks developed and maintained by the group are used internationally
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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