Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
in Engineering Mathematics, Data Science, Fintech, Digital Health, and Robotics. We are most keen to hear from those interested in teaching artificial intelligence. This could be attractive to you if
-
the School of Chemistry at the University of Bristol, proudly rated #1 in the UK for chemistry research. We seek applicants who are developing international leadership in their research field, with strong
-
; (5) curate and release open-source code, annotated datasets and pre-trained models (e.g., via GitHub), including concise user documentation/tutorials You have a PhD in biological sciences and have
-
facilities, and beyond as appropriate. You have: A good honours degree in Computer Science or a related field. A PhD or working towards one in Computer Science or a closely related discipline, or substantial
-
in Engineering Mathematics, Data Science, Fintech, Digital Health, and Robotics. We are most keen to hear from those interested in teaching artificial intelligence. This could be attractive to you if
-
outcomes. It will also incorporate genetic data within the economic and social sciences. The project is based in the School of Economics, but it involves collaborations across multiple disciplines
-
opportunity to collaborate with experiments. This position would suit a researcher who has recently completed a PhD in Chemistry, Biochemistry or close to completion or related field and expertise in
-
and develop data-driven theoretical models for temporally correlated transport processes. The project is well-suited to current PhD students or postdoctoral scholars who are comfortable crossing
-
Children (http://www.bristol.ac.uk/alspac/researchers/our-data/ ), UK Biobank) and techniques in genetic (e.g., Mendelian randomization) and observational epidemiology. This is a predominantly epidemiology
-
situ structural biology of phagocytic events. You will: Lead research into in situ structural biology of phagocytosis, including cryo-FIB-SEM sample prep and data acquisition, cryo-electron tomography