163 modeling-and-simulation-post-doc Postdoctoral positions at University of Oxford in Uk
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, or computational modelling. This post is based at the Department of Computer Science and on-site working is required. Remote and part-time working options must be agreed with Professor Nobuko Yoshida. What We Offer
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We are seeking a full-time Postdoctoral Research Assistant to join Torr Vision Group at the Department of Engineering Science, central Oxford. The post is funded by EPSRC and is fixed-term
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on the electrosolvation force under development in the group. The planned investigations are primarily experimental in nature, but will proceed in close conjunction with insight from theory and simulations. The ideal
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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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structural), ECG, and genetics, to model disease trajectories and improve risk prediction in cardiomyopathies. The successful applicant will work closely with the PI to deliver research projects, supervise
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Applications are invited for a Postdoctoral Research Assistant in Ion Trap Quantum Computing. The post is available initially for a fixed-term duration of 3 years, with the possibility of extension
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Haematology Unit. You will use state-of-the-art genetic tools and functional genomics to generate and characterize models of CH and ageing, including the role of the bone marrow microenvironment in
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in a highly experimental laboratory is what we value in our colleagues. This is a 1-year fixed-term post in the first instance, with possibility of renewal. You will be working as part of a team to
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Postdoctoral Research Associate in Forest Resilience, Climate Change, and Human Health in the Amazon
The role Reporting to the Principal Investigator, Dr. Jesús Aguirre Gutiérrez, the post holder is a member of the research group BioEO: Biodiversity and Earth Observation within the Environmental
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, quantum error mitigation, all the way to full fault-tolerant computation. This post is primarily funded by the EPSRC Quantum Technologies Fellowship held by Dr Cai. The appointee will benefit from Oxford’s