74 computer-science-phd Postdoctoral positions at University of Oxford in United Kingdom
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training of mice, in vivo two-photon imaging, viral circuit tracing, and computational analysis to study how fronto-sensory feedback microcircuits contribute to adaptive cognition. The successful applicant
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difficulties in the research projects. It is essential that you hold a PhD/DPhil in a quantitative discipline (eg Operations Research, Management Science, Statistics, Machine Learning, Applied Mathematics
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received before midday on Thursday 20th November 2025 will be considered. Interviews will be held as soon as possible thereafter. About You You should hold a PhD and postdoctoral research experience
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out rigorous and impactful research into the computational mechanisms of human learning using deep neural network models, and disseminating the findings within the research group, across the wider
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Disease Research Programme. This role focuses on advancing early diagnosis and risk stratification in individuals with inherited cardiac conditions through cutting-edge imaging research. The successful
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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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device fabrication. Applicants should possess or be close to obtaining a PhD in physics, chemistry, materials science or engineering. They should be highly versed in materials synthesis and
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completed, or be close to completing, a PhD/DPhil in a relevant quantitative field together with a demonstrable track record in studying humans and machine learning models. Advanced programming and
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medicine, with a primary focus on optimizing clinical trial design. The partnership will bring together the University of Oxford’s expertise in statistics, mathematics, engineering and AI with industry
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to study health and disease. Accordingly, almost all of contemporary biological science research is critically dependent on our ability to identify which genes are related in different species. The Kelly