122 parallel-computing-numerical-methods-"DTU" Postdoctoral positions at University of Oxford
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We are seeking a highly motivated Postdoctoral Research Scientist with a strong background in human induced pluripotent stem cell (iPSC) differentiations and computational analysis to join Dr
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focus on ambitious, ‘blue sky’ research for novel methods development relevant for drug discovery analysis pipelines, trial design and operational efficiency. Led by Professor Chris Holmes, and with
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mechanism design. The project will involve close collaboration with project teams at Imperial College London, the Edinburgh Parallel Computing Centre (EPCC) and the Luxembourg Institute of Science and
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lab has developed the OrthoFinder comparative genomic methods. OrthoFinder has become widely-used in comparative genomics research, it powers many popular databases of online genomic information, and
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Engineering, Mathematics, Statistics, Computer Science or conjugate subject; strong record of publication in the relevant literature; good knowledge of machine learning algorithms and/or statistical methods
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multiple aspects of work to meet deadlines. You will adapt existing and develop new scientific techniques and experimental methods, as well as contribute ideas for new research projects. You will use
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computational sciences, decision-maker education campaigns, and training the next generations of technology governance leaders. It is one of the few organisations in the world to focus on the governance of AI
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The Department of Biology is seeking to recruit 2 Postdoctoral Research Associates for 2 years. These posts are financially supported by the UKRI through the Frontier Guarantee Programme to Dr Jani
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part of a wider programme of work to establish that membraneless organelles, biological liquid droplets, are effectively regions of organic solvent, suspended inside cells and that the properties of each
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and clinical neuroscience. This project involves development of machine learning methods for mapping the relationships between diffusion MRI (dMRI) and phase-sensitive OCT (PS-OCT) in the same tissue