77 cloud-computing-"https:"-"https:"-"https:" Postdoctoral positions at University of Oxford
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About the role We are seeking a full-time Postdoctoral Researcher to join the Oxford Secure and Advanced Computer Architecture Research (OSCAR) group at the Department of Engineering Science
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achieving beam stability with minimal impact on beam lifetime. Detrimental coherent beam instabilities such as, e.g., the slow head-tail or electron cloud instability, are typically mitigated with schemes
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to develop a program of work investigating how brains use internal models of task and world structure to enable flexible goal-directed behaviour. The experiments will involve recording and/or manipulating
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, economics, and other areas of computational social science; • AI scientists for natural science, integrating LLM agents with simulation and, where appropriate, robotic experimentation (e.g., automated “dry
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towns programme, organise and run patient and public involvement events to engage with community members and innovate, contribute to and promote the research, publication and impact focus of the centre in
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will contribute to an exciting, interdisciplinary programme developing next-generation human in vitro models of pain. The project aims to recreate the complex multicellular interactions that underlie
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-linear systems of ordinary differential equations and the proficient use statistical programming languages (R, Julia or Python), Bash computing and the development of computational packages are essential
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proof-of-principle repetition-rate and staging experimentation. The successful candidate will perform duties that include developing/using particle-in-cell computer codes hosted on local and national high
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This 36-month postdoctoral position is part of the project ENLIGHT (Enabling a Lifecycle Approach to Graphite for Advanced Modular Reactors) consortium, a £13.2 million, five-year programme
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as part of an CRUK Discovery Programme Foundation Award in close collaboration with Dr Robert Köchl between the Kennedy Institute of Rheumatology (KIR) and Kings College London (KCL). The focus