108 computational Postdoctoral research jobs at University of Oxford in United Kingdom
Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Listed
-
Field
-
Programme Manager, using the contact details below. Only online applications received before 12.00 midday on 29th August will be considered. Interviews will be held as soon as possible thereafter
-
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
-
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
-
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
-
development (ECD) and raise global visibility of climate impacts on ECD. The post holder will be a member of Climate Research Programme at ECI in SoGE, reporting to Dr Neven Fučkar, Senior Researcher, and there
-
the performance of lithium ion technologies. To support the programme, the post holder will be required to carry out research on characterisation of battery degradation, with a particular focus on the application
-
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
-
methods suitable for legged systems in physically-realistic simulated environments and on real robots. You should hold or be close to completion of a PhD/DPhil in robotics, computer science, machine
-
annum inclusive of Oxford University weighting Potential to under fill at grade 06RS: £34,982-£40,855 per annum inclusive of Oxford University weighting The Department of Computer Science seeks to employ
-
, 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