265 computer-security "https:" "https:" "https:" "https:" "UCL" positions at University of Nottingham
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, safety, and cost. One of the most common causes of development delays is the presence of technical silos between specialised teams. Because the disciplines are tightly interconnected, a small change can
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. We provide a structure for people to thrive, feel supported, valued and that their health, safety and wellbeing is being managed (including mental wellbeing). The aim and purpose of the School
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funded project aiming to characterise rhythmicity in human skeletal muscle metabolism and how exercise affects it. The post holder will be responsible for the day-to-day running of this programme of work
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holders will be able to spend some time working from home if desired: Role 1 – Computer Science (UoA11) and Mathematical Sciences (UoA10) (primarily based at University Park and Jubilee campuses) Role 2
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prospects for future project involvement should further funding be secured. This post is a full time (36.25 hours weekly) Fixed-term post for 6 months. About the team You will join the Nottingham Centre
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awareness, and decision quality. The project will examine how system design, automation characteristics, and regulatory or governance constraints shape human performance and patient outcomes in safety
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, robust, and trustworthy when deployed in real-world, safety-critical environments. Together, we will advance the foundations of intelligent autonomous systems by combining modern reinforcement learning
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, crucial for areas such as sustainable agriculture and food security. Such an imaging system would allow for studies of a plant’s resilience to drought, salinity, and water logging, as well as responses
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be compared and calibrated. In-silico technique based on Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) will also be developed to provide further information necessary for the development of new MRI image scanning
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skeletal muscle metabolism. The post holder will be responsible for the day-to-day running of this programme of work as part of Prof Tsintzas’ research team in the Division of Physiology, Pharmacology and