155 distributed-computing-associate-professor Postdoctoral positions at University of Oxford in Uk
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of innate sensing and signalling in macrophages at the Kennedy Institute of Rheumatology. In this position you will report to the Principal Investigator, Professor Jelena Bezbradica Mirkovic. In this position
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engineering, computer science or other field relevant to the proposed area of research. You should have a good track record of robotic publications/presentations in the field of healthcare, possess sufficient
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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
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and Prof Paul Shearing. The post is funded through a strategic research partnership and is fixed term for up to 2 years. To support the programme, the post holder will be required to carry out research
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will have Knowledge of approaches for areas related to agentic systems powered by LLMs or VLMs and an ability to manage own academic research and associated activities. Informal enquiries may be
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in wide-bandgap solids are an example, where the deterministic interaction between emitted photons and electronic and nuclear spins enables photon mediated entanglement for distributed quantum networks
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academic research and associated activities. Have excellent communication skills, including the ability to write for publication, present research proposals and results, and represent the research group
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own academic research and associated activities is key to this role. Along with having excellent communication skills including having the ability to write for publication, present research proposals
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atmospheric plasmas are inaccurate and do not produce the correct compositions and energy distributions of expanding flows. The proposed research aims to make a step change in domestic and international
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About the role We are seeking a highly motivated and ambitious Postdoctoral Researcher to join the Translation Biology Research Group led by Professor Kerry Fisher and Alex Gordon-Weeks. The group