151 high-performance-quantum-computing-"Multiple" Postdoctoral positions at University of Oxford
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research initiative funded by ARIA, titled Aggregating Safety Preferences for AI Systems: A Social Choice Approach. The project operates at the interface of AI safety and computational social choice, and
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record in conducting cross-species research to investigate how cells and circuits in the brain work together to perform computations that support memory. The proposed research will take full advantage
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predicts battery performance and properties from fabrication line measurements. About you Hold (or be near completion of) a PhD/DPhil in Control Engineering or a related subject, with the possibility
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About the role The Kelly lab is excited to announce a new post-doctoral position in computational biology. This position is funded as part of an international consortium of scientists who
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Jarvis to lead the processing of the MIGHTEE continuum and HI survey data. The role requires a high level of technical expertise in radio interferometry techniques and would help coordinate the processing
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management of sport injuries, with emphasis on safety rather than performance. You will be part of an interdisciplinary team of pioneering researchers, with the primary aim to develop cutting-edge robotics and
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accessibility of the method to enhance user ability to perform analyses in comparative genomics, enable new analyses, and gain new evolutionary insights from data generated using OrthoFinder. The successful
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dioxide copolymerization catalysis, including using high-pressure reactors. We seek a candidate interested to join our diverse, multi-disciplinary research team and help us to try to solve these important
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Oxford’s Department of Orthopaedics (NDORMS) as well as collaborators in Bristol and Cardiff. You should have a PhD/DPhil (or be near completion) in robotics, computer vision, machine learning or a closely
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migration, nanoscale assembly, or complex charge-screening processes are still poorly understood despite their critical impact on electronic properties and device performance. The project will provide a