Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Listed
-
Program
-
Field
-
PhD in Computer Science, Engineering or other Machine Learning-related field. • Programming experience in python, C++ or other relevant language and experience in deep neural networks • Strong
-
responsible for the delivery of high-calibre farming systems research, based on a network of already established field trials to evaluate how crop rotation/sequence, time of sowing and nitrogen management
-
decision-making. You will play a key role in both supporting and leading the delivery of farming systems research, based on a network of already established field trials to evaluate how crop rotation
-
facilities at the University (e.g., Adelaide Microscopy, MASS) and to the wider network of expertise at The University of Adelaide, CSIRO, Geoscience Australia, and through the ARC Training Centre. To be
-
membership is an EMBL Partnership Programme established in 2010, entitled ‘EMBL Australia Partner Laboratory Network’ (PLN). The partnership aims to seed a dynamic, highly collaborative culture across
-
focused on understanding and countering harmful narratives and, mis/disinformation, and applying social network analysis. To be successful you will need: PhD in a relevant discipline such as computer
-
experienced Postdoctoral Research Fellow B to undertake research in the field of physics-informed neural networks for magnetic sensing. This project combines the strengths of industry and academia to leverage
-
an employer contribution of 17% superannuation. 24 Months Fixed-term contract | Part-time or Full-time opportunity. The Australian Plant Phenomics Network (APPN) was established in 2009 under the Australian
-
Learning-related field. Programming experience in Matlab, Python, C++ or other relevant language and experience in deep neural networks. Experience and demonstratable knowledge in deep learning, transformer
-
. The successful candidate would work with an international network of researchers from the University of Adelaide, University of Tasmania, University of Melbourne, University of Copenhagen and the Norwegian