20 computer-algorithm-"https:" "Simons Foundation" Postdoctoral positions at University of London
Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
About the Role This is an exciting position where applicants are invited to join a multi-disciplinary team of bioengineers, biomedical scientists, and computer scientists working together at Queen
-
experience, with expertise in at least one of the areas: graph polynomials and partition functions, computational counting algorithms and complexity, combinatorics, models in statistical physics. About the
-
Computer Science at Queen Mary University of London, working with Professor Rachel Humphris and Dr Dimitrios Kollias. The successful applicant will undertake computational research, including algorithmic
-
will develop and apply computational methods for the analysis of cell-free DNA (cfDNA) sequencing data, supporting a growing research program at the intersection of epigenomics and translational medicine
-
to trace how welfare algorithms operate in practice. They will also contribute to comparative analysis across case study countries, support interdisciplinary collaboration, engage with external stakeholders
-
:38183983) using cutting-edge genomics technologies (https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2024.12.20.629444v5) to provide core knowledge for development of new therapies and management strategies for PPK
-
About the Role The post entails undertaking research in collaboration with and under the supervision of the project lead of the research programme ‘Politics and mythmaking: disentangling myth from
-
About the Role This is an exciting position where applicants are invited to join a multi-disciplinary team of bioengineers, biomedical scientists, and computer scientists working together at Queen
-
evaluating computational methods, analysing imaging data, collaborating with clinicians for real-world impact, and contributing to publications. About You PhD (or near completion) in computer
-
About the Role Join the Green-Loop project, a £1.3M UKRI-EPSRC and DEFRA-funded programme addressing solar panel waste. By 2030, the UK will generate approximately 1 million tons of decommissioned