109 computer-programmer-"https:"-"FEMTO-ST" "https:" "https:" "https:" "https:" "https:" "U.S" Postdoctoral positions at University of Oxford
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to reduce inequality in high-income countries, and/or (3) the study of social mobility and its relationship to economic inequality. The post holder will work with the INET Oxford programme on Economics
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by ATi/Innovate UK and Rolls Royce and is fixed-term to June 2029. You will join a world‑leading programme advancing experimental and numerical methods to predict the impact performance of composite
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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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development towards optimizing and understanding sonochemical nitrogen fixation to help advance our internationally leading programme of research. This work will also contribute towards building a case for a
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clinical trials, and developing personalised models to understand therapy response characteristics. You will contribute to a pioneering tissue-focused research programme aimed at enhancing cure rates
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program exploring the role of fluctuations in molecular transport processes by studying highly controlled experimental models at the meso- and nanoscale, funded by a UKRI Frontier Research Guarantee Grant
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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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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