117 computer-science-image-processing positions at University of Liverpool in United-States
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. You will be predominantly based in theatre, assisting our diverse referral caseload, for Soft Tissue Surgery, Neurology, Orthopaedics, Diagnostic Imaging, Oncology, Internal Medicine, Cardiology, and
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. You will be predominantly based in theatre, assisting our diverse referral caseload, from Soft Tissue Surgery, Neurology, Orthopaedics, Diagnostic Imaging, Oncology, Internal Medicine, Cardiology, and
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individual with excellent verbal and written communication skills to join a team of experienced subject specialists who teach preclinical sciences to the first two years of the five-year clinical veterinary
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This clinical training post will be based in the Small Animal Teaching Hospital at Leahurst on the Wirral Peninsula. Facilities include a state-of-the-art imaging suite and theatres. There is
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recently developed in a commercial 65 nm CMOS imaging process by a large international consortium of engineers and scientists for the ALICE ITS3 upgrade and the future experiments, ePIC@EIC and ALICE3@LHC
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to artificial intelligence (AI) (e.g. computer science, engineering, Statistics, and mathematics etc.) The post is available for 30 months, starting on 1 September 2025. If you are still awaiting your PhD to be
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We are seeking an enthusiastic individual to work as a Laboratory Technician for a programme of research called Children Growing Up in Liverpool. Working under the direction of the Programme
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business and process improvement analysts and will work on a wide variety of projects, often complex in nature and usually working across multiple projects at the same time. You will be responsible
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We are looking to appoint two Lecturers in Pharmacy Practice to contribute to the ongoing development and delivery of our MPharm degree programme, due to launch in September 2026. You will join the
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will involve processing medical image data sets, taking experimental measurements of movement patterns in living birds and conducting dynamic physics simulations of locomotion in both living birds and