94 algorithm-development-"Prof"-"Prof"-"Prof" Postdoctoral positions at University of Oxford
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results at international and national conferences and workshops. They will be strongly encouraged and supported by the team in developing their long-term career trajectory, including: i) receiving mentoring
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to advance hepatitis B and liver disease research and to develop novel analytic approaches for NHS routine data. You will be based at the University of Oxford, joining a collaborative, interdisciplinary
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establish and validate microfluidic co-culture systems using human glomerular cells and benchmark these platforms against human kidney multi-omic and spatial datasets. These systems will be further developed
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analysis of data from a Nipah virus vaccine trial, using machine learning and statistical tools to identify immune response markers for future trials. You will be responsible for developing new and adapting
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form, how it is generated and how it evolves. In particular we focus on the evolution and evolvability of vertebral counts, and we use various species of Lake Malawi cichlids as our model organism
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research team investigates molecular mechanisms underlying viral evolution and host changes. You will be working on a project that will focus on understanding how some viruses can change their receptor
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risks to aircraft engines. The Particles Research Group works on icing problems closely with industrial partners, is currently developing a new altitude icing wind tunnel and entering a new EPSRC
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challenges, from reducing our carbon emissions to developing vaccines during a pandemic. The Department of Psychiatry is based on the Warneford Hospital site in Oxford – a friendly, welcoming place of work
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challenges, from reducing our carbon emissions to developing vaccines during a pandemic. The Department of Psychiatry is based on the Warneford Hospital site in Oxford – a friendly, welcoming place of work
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from across the Eurozone to develop state-of-the-art multimodal LLMs. The successful candidate will play a key role in shaping the ethical frameworks that will guide the future of this rapidly evolving