Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
research environment supported by a team with broad expertise in data science, infectious diseases, hepatology, and clinical informatics. You will take a leading role in analysing large-scale, longitudinal
-
We seek to appoint a Research Associate (postdoctoral scientist) to join the prolific climate/weather/environmental and impact science community at the University of Oxford, that is interested in
-
have completed, or be close to completing, a PhD/DPhil in a relevant quantitative field such as computational social science, computer science, or cognitive science. They will have a demonstrable track
-
Applications are invited for a Postdoctoral Research Assistant in Ion Trap Quantum Computing. The post is available initially for a fixed-term duration of 3 years, with the possibility of extension
-
engineering, computer science or other field relevant to the proposed area of research. You should have a good track record of robotic publications/presentations in the field of healthcare, possess sufficient
-
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
-
We are seeking five full-time Postdoctoral Research Assistants to join the Computational Health Informatics Lab at the Department of Engineering Science, based at the Institute of Biomedical
-
for data analysis/scientific computing, and excellent decision-making, problem-solving, planning, and organisational skills. Please direct enquiries about the role to Prof Martin Bureau: (martin.bureau
-
full-stack approach to suppressing errors in quantum hardware. This research focuses on achieving practical quantum computation by integrating techniques ranging from hardware-level noise suppression
-
Science Park. The post is funded by Innovate UK and is fixed-term to 30th April 2026. The CEBD project is an ambitious programme to develop the first category enhanced battery powered eVTOL. The project