Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Listed
-
Employer
-
Field
-
Postdoctoral Research Associate in Archaeology and Agent-Based Modelling ( Job Number: 25001105) Department of Archaeology Grade 7: - £38,784 - £46,049 per annum Fixed Term - Full Time Contract
-
renewable award. You will lead a programme of research in the molecular mechanisms of cardiovascular disease, that may include a range of approaches including targeted genetic murine models, primary cell
-
, defensive mechanisms and related topics to the safe deployment of systems contain multiple LLM and VLM powered models. You will be responsible for Developing and implementing; capability evaluations, attacks
-
on evaluating the abilities of large language models (LLMs) of replicating results from the arXiv.org repository across computational sciences and engineering. You should have a PhD/DPhil (or be near completion
-
to the 4th February 2026. You will be investigating the safety and security implications of large language model (LLM) agents, particularly those capable of interacting with operating systems and external APIs
-
candidate will work at the intersection of multi-disciplinary modelling, advanced AI algorithms, and decision-support tool development for various hydrogen technologies-based energy systems. Responsibilities
-
level of detail extracted from these experiments. As part of this role, you will work closely with other researchers to translate these experimental results into our numerical models, helping to improve
-
researchers to translate these experimental results into our numerical models, helping to improve their predictive capability. You will help ensure a healthy and vibrant research environment within the Impact
-
The post holder will develop computational models of learning processes in cortical networks. The research will employ mathematical modelling and computer simulation to identify synaptic plasticity
-
lines, as well as embryo phenotyping. Cell culture is used to either generate genetically defined mouse lines or challenge human-relevant disease models at the Mary Lyon Centre. Mouse embryos and adult