167 assistant-professor-computer-science Postdoctoral research jobs at University of Oxford
Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
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
-
Machine Learning, Human-Computing Interactions, Social Sciences, and Public Health. Applicants should hold, or be close to completion of, PhD/DPhil with research experience in computer science, statistics
-
specificity from glycan- to protein-binding and how the receptor selection may influence the mechanism of viral entry. Answering these questions will help us understand some past pandemics and better prepare
-
Wellcome Trust and by project-specific funding from the EU Horizon programme. As part of a multi-disciplinary research team, you will contribute to analyses of the global food system. Some of the interests
-
of the project. Applicants should hold, or be close to completion of, PhD/DPhil in Biology or a related subject. You should have a high level of competence in cell biology and relevant experience demonstrated by
-
and structural biology of rhomboid-like membrane proteins. You should hold a PhD/DPhil in a topic relevant to structural biology and biochemistry, together with relevant experience. You should be able
-
PREVIOUS APPLICANTS NEED NOT TO APPLY! We are seeking to appoint a Senior Postdoctoral Researcher in Genomics of Myeloid Disorders to join the computational genomics group led by Prof Schuster
-
will have or be close to the completion of a PhD in Neuroscience, Psychology or a closely related discipline. With in-depth knowledge of cognitive and computational neuroscience including motivation
-
rhizobia can fix up to 200 kg N per ha, as crops and for forage are potential ways to improve both N efficiency and the sustainability of agriculture. In this project we are engineering nif clusters
-
the possibility of making “universal” vaccines by targeting these epitopes. We have validated this methodology for the influenza virus (https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-018-06228-8) and the technology has