151 distributed-computing-associate-professor Postdoctoral positions at University of Oxford
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-associated cancers such as ovarian and breast cancer. As a Postdoctoral Researcher, you will play a pivotal role in discovering and validating neoepitopes. Working closely with an interdisciplinary team, you
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Researcher to join the Translation Biology Research Group led by Mr Alex Gordon-Weeks and Professor Kerry Fisher. The group is focussed on understanding the human tumour microenvironment (TME) and its role in
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Professor Marco Fritzsche as part of an MRC Standard Grant. In this role, you will manage your own academic research and administrative activities, including small scale project management, to co-ordinate
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Reporting to Professor Fernanda Pirie, the post holder will be a researcher on the project entitled ‘‘Tibetan law: the socio-historic exploration of a unique legal system”. The postholder will have
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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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with biologists. You will report to the engineering lead on the project About the role The project will aim to develop fluid walls and associated automation workflows to enable microscale cell-based
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focus on ambitious, ‘blue sky’ research for novel methods development relevant for drug discovery analysis pipelines, trial design and operational efficiency. Led by Professor Chris Holmes, and with
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choice theory, or computational modelling. This post is based at the Department of Computer Science and on-site working is required. Remote and part-time working is possible in agreement with Professor
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. Armed with this information, the post holder will use cutting-edge paleoclimatic modelling that incorporates nutrient cycling and carbon chemistry (HadOCC) to infer the distribution of potential feeding