20 electrical-and-computer-engineering Postdoctoral positions at King's College London
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: analytical and forensic science; asthma and allergy; biophysics and cell biology; cancer; cardiovascular; nutrition and diabetes; genetics; infection and immunology; imaging and biomedical engineering
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departments: Cardiovascular Imaging, Cancer Imaging, Early Life Imaging, Imaging Chemistry & Biology, Biomedical Computing, Surgical & Interventional Engineering, Imaging Physics & Engineering and Digital Twins
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the Department of Informatics, part of the Faculty of Natural, Mathematical & Engineering Sciences (NMES). The department is internationally recognised for its contributions to robotics, AI, and human-centred
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work make a real-world impact? King’s College London is seeking a talented Postdoctoral Research Associate to join the pioneering NanoCure project, an ambitious programme developing medical-grade
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to cutting-edge efforts to predict and understand psychosis and affective disorders. We welcome applicants with a background in psychology, psychiatry, biomedical engineering, or related disciplines who
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of Natural, Mathematical & Engineering Sciences (NMES) comprises Chemistry, Engineering, Informatics, Mathematics, and Physics, all departments highly rated in research activities and a wide-ranging portfolio
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of producing academic journal articles is essential. You will likely have at least a Masters degree in Health Data Science, Data Science, Computer Science, Maths/Engineering, or a Medical Sciences subject, and
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Institute, Germany), and Dr Stephan Stahlschmidt (DZHW, Germany). The successful candidate will be appointed as soon as possible and employed until the conclusion of the project. The current projected end
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: analytical and forensic science; asthma and allergy; biophysics and cell biology; cancer; cardiovascular; nutrition and diabetes; genetics; infection and immunology; imaging and biomedical engineering
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affects one in ten people, and it is classed as a significant unmet medical need because the current treatment is inadequate, with fewer than one in three people being cured. Infections in the hands and