105 senior-lecturer-distributed-computing Postdoctoral positions at University of Oxford
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on evaluating the abilities of large language models (LLMs) of replicating results from the arXiv.org repository across computational sciences and engineering. You should have a PhD/DPhil (or be near completion
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programme grant with partners across the UK to facilitate the use of hydrogen for aviation, and in particular the icing vulnerability of heat exchangers and parts of the airframe. You will work to generate
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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
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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
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We are looking to appoint a postdoctoral researcher, to work with a group of UK Higher Education Institutions to deliver a programme of mental health research. The work is funded by the Medical
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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
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and Prof Paul Shearing. The post is funded through a strategic research partnership and is fixed term for up to 2 years. To support the programme, the post holder will be required to carry out research
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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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with the possibility of renewal. This project addresses the high computational and energy costs of Large Language Models (LLMs) by developing more efficient training and inference methods, particularly
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, calcium imaging, optogenetics and/or behavioural methods. The project is part of a broader research programme designed to use cross-species research to uncover mechanisms for memory in both health and