22 programming-language-"St"-"University-of-St"-"St" Postdoctoral positions at KINGS COLLEGE LONDON
Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Applications are invited for a Research Fellow position on the UKRI-funded Turing AI Fellowship project ‘Event-Centric Framework for Natural Language Understanding’ led by Prof. Yulan He. The 5-year project aims
-
structured programming language, ideally python, and should have good experience in the analysis of photometric and spectroscopic data of exoplanet atmospheres. The projects will involve the use, modification
-
mechanical design Experience with beam shaping techniques (e.g., spatial light modulators, diffractive optical elements) Proficiency in programming languages like LabVIEW, Python, MATLAB, or C++, and
-
imaging data augmentation techniques for robust model design. Strong written and oral communication skills including evidence of publishing peer reviewed research articles. Desirable criteria Experience
-
housing. Ideally, the candidate will also have language skills and overseas fieldwork experience in a city in one of the project’s focal areas (Greece, Spain, Portugal, Romania, or the USA), experience in
-
primary sources and related secondary literature in at least one the target languages is essential, although both languages is preferred. Ability to work with related materials in other languages is an
-
of interest in this area include, but are not limited to: natural language processing, large language models, graph learning, general pre-trained transformers, prompt engineering, knowledge graphs, knowledge
-
scientists, the funders and the public in English Proven ability to keep accurate records and write to a high standard in English * Please note that this is a PhD level role but candidates who have submitted
-
findings both verbally and in presentations to other scientists, the funders and the public in English Proven ability to keep accurate records and write to a high standard in English * Please note that this
-
About us A post-doctoral research associate position is available at the Photonics & Nanotechnology group, Physics Department, King’s College London, funded by the EPSRC Programme Grant New