Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Fixed-term: The funds for this post are available for 1 year from October 2025. We are looking for a Research Assistant/Associate to join the Raspberry Pi Computing Education Research Centre in the
-
replacement) project on Limits of Symmetric Computation. The position would suit a candidate seeking to obtain a PhD at the Department. The project seeks to investigate lower bounds on symmetric computation in
-
developing cutting-edge computer vision and deep learning aimed at optimising inspection and monitoring of infrastructure. Applying these advanced technologies to real-world infrastructure challenges through
-
source tools for distributed biomanufacturing of enzymes and antibodies at low-cost using benchtop microbial and plant systems. The overall goals of OpenBioMAPS are to work with UK biomanufacturing
-
duties involve supporting computational infrastructure, coordinating with wider spectroscopic project teams and external science users, contributing to documentation and user manuals, and collaborating
-
position will contribute to the research programme of the recently founded "AI Hub in Generative Models", a research consortium funded by EPSRC. The goal of the programme is to do research in the area of
-
of researchers who conduct cutting-edge research into NLP and AI within the University of Cambridge. Education: An excellent first degree in computer science, engineering or a closely related field Skills and
-
Partnership in collaboration with Hitachi Europe Ltd, developing engineered proteins for carbon upcycling and sustainability. The role holder will collaborate with computational and biological scientists
-
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
-
animals, while Prof Durbin's works on computational genomics and large scale genome science, including the development of new algorithms and statistical methods to study genome evolution. Moving forward