176 computer-science-image-processing Postdoctoral research jobs at University of Oxford in United Kingdom
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processing, biomedical engineering, have a strong record of publication in engineering or computer science literature, and have an interest in the use of AI in healthcare. Proven competence in programming
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Oxford’s Department of Orthopaedics (NDORMS) as well as collaborators in Bristol and Cardiff. You should have a PhD/DPhil (or be near completion) in robotics, computer vision, machine learning or a closely
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researchers will extend and apply the ideas of active matter physics in biological contexts, developing theories and cell-scale and continuum computational models. The work will focus on identifying physical
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new collaborations within the centre. You must hold a PhD (or near completion) in statistical genetics, functional genomics, computational biology, or a related field together with proficiency in
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inference attacks, to mitigate privacy leaks in MMFM. You will hold a PhD/DPhil (or be near completion) in a relevant discipline such as computer science, data science, statistics or mathematics; expertise in
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research environment supported by a team with broad expertise in data science, infectious diseases, hepatology, and clinical informatics. You will take a leading role in analysing large-scale, longitudinal
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Mobility Reading Group led by Nobuko Yoshida. The successful candidate will be located in the Department of Computer Science Reporting to Professor Nobuko Yoshida, the post holder will be responsible
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Modernising Medical Microbiology (MMM) unit at the University of Oxford (https://www.expmedndm.ox.ac.uk/mmm). You will be joining a highly interdisciplinary team of approximately 40 clinicians, computational
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and leading a programme of numerical simulations relating to all aspects of our research on P-MoPAs; using particle-in-cell computer codes hosted on local and national high-performance computing
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Researcher to join the Translation Biology Research Group led by Mr Alex Gordon-Weeks and Professor Kerry Fisher. The group is focussed on understanding the human tumour microenvironment (TME) and its role in