169 component-labeling-agorithm-cuda Postdoctoral research jobs at University of Oxford
Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Listed
-
Field
-
would be given to candidates wishing to work part-time (minimum 80% FTE) on a pro rata basis. You will be responsible for leading, coordinating and monitoring quantitative and qualitative research
-
of research interests (describing how past experience and future plans fit with the advertised position), CV and the details of two referees as part of your online application. The Department holds
-
transcription factors contain long disordered regions, but an incomplete understanding of their roles impedes transcription factor and therapeutics design. You will describe roles quantitatively by biophysically
-
the departments bioinformatics capabilities more broadly. You would be encouraged to take part in postgraduate teaching (mostly MSc students) that would typically amount to 2-3 lectures or tutorial per year. This
-
nanotubes, enables the exploration of thermodynamic processes at the nanoscale. Carbon nanotubes serve as exceptional nanomechanical resonators due to their low mass, high stiffness, and quality factor
-
Applications are invited for a Postdoctoral Research Assistant in Very High Angular Resolution Astrophysics at the Physics Department, University of Oxford. This project is an integral part of
-
applications must be made online using the Oxford University E-Recruitment system, no later than 12 noon on 26th September 2025. You will be required to upload a CV and a Supporting Statement as part of your
-
include helping with supervision of doctoral students working on projects as part of the initiative, performing analysis in close contact with the associated clinical researchers and taking responsibility
-
forefront of AI and ethics. The role focuses on innovative research into the ethical governance of Large Language Models (LLMs), as part of the prestigious Divirsibus Vis Plurima Solvo project. This is a 2
-
observations and interpretation of such jets, and will become part of the international ‘X-KAT’ team using new data from the MeerKAT radio telescope to study these jets. They will furthermore become a core