124 parallel-computing-numerical-methods Postdoctoral positions at University of Oxford in Uk
-
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
-
used in our work centre around optical imaging and spectroscopy and nanofabrication. The work also relies on theory and simulation, specifically focusing on numerical mean-field electrostatics
-
. The group is well known for developing single-molecule and single-cell fluorescence methods (Uphoff PNAS 2013; Zagajewski, Nature Comm Biol 2023, Chatzimichail, Lab-on-a-chip 2024) and applying them
-
We are seeking five full-time Postdoctoral Research Assistants to join the Computational Health Informatics Lab at the Department of Engineering Science, based at the Institute of Biomedical
-
hepatitis and liver disease. This post is funded by the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR) as part of a significant research programme that leverages large-scale healthcare datasets
-
and manipulation and a knowledge of relevant statistical methods. You will possess exceptional organisational skills, an ability to work efficiently with collaborators and to supervise and educate
-
with the possibility of renewal. This project addresses the high computational and energy costs of Large Language Models (LLMs) by developing more efficient training and inference methods, particularly
-
methods suitable for legged systems in physically-realistic simulated environments and on real robots. You should hold or be close to completion of a PhD/DPhil in robotics, computer science, machine
-
settings. We are seeking a highly motivated postdoc to conduct research into this fast-moving area. Directions may include investigating quality evaluation methods for multi-agent systems, attack surfaces
-
into practical methods for smarter testing and control. You’ll need to have expertise in modelling and simulation of dynamic systems, strong programming skills, and the ability to communicate your research clearly