166 parallel-and-distributed-computing-phd-"Multiple" Postdoctoral positions at University of Oxford
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. The project involves the study of disorder–property relationships and is funded by the EPSRC. Find out more about the Goodwin research and group here About you Applicants must hold a PhD in Chemistry or a
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. Iain McCulloch and is funded by the EPSRC. Find out more about the research group at: About you Applicants must hold a PhD in Chemistry, Physics or a relevant subject area, (or be close to completion
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you will manage your own academic research and administrative activities which involves small-scale project management, to coordinate multiple aspects of work to meet deadlines. You will adapt existing
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for this post. The successful candidate will be required to develop a personal research programme in theoretical cosmology (which may include numerical modelling and/or data analysis), interacting with faculty
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computational workflows on a high-performance cluster. You will test hypotheses using data from multiple sources, refining your approach as needed. The role also involves close collaboration with colleagues
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hepatitis and liver disease. This post is funded by the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR) as part of a significant research programme that leverages large-scale healthcare datasets
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with an international reputation for excellence. The Department has a substantial research programme, with major funding from Medical Research Council (MRC), Wellcome Trust and National Institute
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, defensive mechanisms and related topics to the safe deployment of systems contain multiple LLM and VLM powered models. You will be responsible for Developing and implementing; capability evaluations, attacks
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Baker). The subject of the research project within the Division of Cardiovascular Medicine, University of Oxford is to re-programme immune cells as part of a larger programme to develop novel therapeutics
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permeability selection in variant membrane chemistries. This work will run in parallel to experimental analysis conducted at the University of Exeter using synthetic vesicles to observe permeability