Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Category
-
Country
-
Program
-
Field
-
researchers, molecular biologists and computational microbiologists. Our work is funded by the Ellison Institute of Technology, Oxford Ltd and the pipelines we develop are deployed in https://www.eit
-
researchers, molecular biologists and computational microbiologists. Our work is funded by the Ellison Institute of Technology, Oxford Ltd and the pipelines we develop are deployed in https://www.eit
-
with an international reputation for excellence. The Department has a substantial research programme, with major funding from Medical Research Council (MRC), Wellcome Trust and National Institute
-
will have a PhD in a relevant scientific discipline and sufficient specialist knowledge relevant to the project to be able to make a start on day one – we do not expect everyone to have all the skills
-
research will feed directly into the broader goals of this programme to assess the suitability of various approaches to GGR. About you You will hold or be close to a PhD in Aqueous/Environmental/Ocean
-
The Department of Computer Science seeks to employ 2 postdoctoral researchers to work on a new project in the area of LLMs/multi-agent systems, under the direction of PI Professor Michael Wooldridge
-
conferences. It is essential that you hold a PhD/DPhil in computational biology, genomics, bioinformatics, computer science, statistics, or a related field together with strong programming skills in Python, R
-
at the University of Oxford. The Podium Institute sits within the Institute of Biomedical Engineering (IBME) in the University’s Department of Engineering Science and is supported by a £25m 10-year donation
-
close to completion of, a PhD/DPhil in molecular and cellular neuroscience, or equivalent • Knowledge of the cell and molecular biology mechanisms of Parkinson’s disease, or related neurodegenerative
-
About the role We are seeking a highly motivated and ambitious Postdoctoral Researcher to join our team in addressing a key question in cancer biology: why brain cancer cells resist current