178 computer-science Postdoctoral research jobs at University of Oxford in United Kingdom
Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Listed
-
Field
-
the Department of Engineering Science. The post is funded for a 2-year fixed term. You will be actively involved in developing and running experimental facilities at the Oxford Thermofluids Institute
-
audiences and an ability to work well independently using own initiative, as well as part of a team. Experience in a variety of advanced microscopy techniques and computational biology expertise are desired
-
spatial transcriptomics (Sanger/Copenhagen). Subsequent validation and exploration of targets will be performed using organoid biology (Oxford). You will work primarily within the Tumour Evolution and
-
, fixed-term for two years, and supported by a grant from the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC), grant reference EP/X026647/1. This position is to start for the 2026-27 academic
-
that will be used in human challenge studies. You will be working in a growing department within the Medical Sciences Division. The Department of Paediatrics is a world leader in child health research and
-
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
-
interdisciplinary research at the interface of physical and biological sciences, and for technology development. This post is fixed term for 22 months The overall project is funded by Oxford Martin School and is a
-
at the plasma membrane. The lab undertakes a multidisciplinary approach spanning biochemistry/biophysics, cell biology and structural biology to address our research questions. In this role you will build on our
-
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 to the University
-
measuring a molecule’s size and shape in the solution phase (Science 2025). Our microchip-based escape-time technology platform now enables measurements of the physical properties of macromolecules such as