91 modelling-complexity-geocomputation Postdoctoral positions at University of Oxford
Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
, and enabling data-driven improvements in patient care. You will have opportunities to apply foundation models—including large language models (LLMs) to real-world clinical data. You will work with well
-
approaches including targeted genetic murine models, primary cell culture and analysis, multi-omics and bioinformatics. The biological focus will be on vascular biology, immune cell function and metabolism
-
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
-
work with in vitro and in vivo models of genetic diseases would be advantageous. Please see the below 'Job Description' for further details on the role, responsibilities, and selection criteria, as
-
Claudia Monaco’s research group at the Kennedy Institute of Rheumatology. In this role, you will apply single cell biology and cell signalling techniques combined with in vivo and in vitro models
-
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
-
systems modelling including technical knowledge (e.g., in data science, input-output modelling, applied economic modelling, environmental and ecological assessments, GIS, comparative risk assessments), as
-
holder will use existing thermal remote sensing data, along with newly developed thermal models, to constrain the variability of Europa’s surface temperatures, properties and activity properties ahead
-
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
-
structural maintenance of chromosomes (SMC) complexes shape chromosomes by DNA loop extrusion, how they cooperate with DNA topoisomerases, and how bacteriophages and other infectious agents manipulate host