91 parallel-processing-bioinformatics Postdoctoral positions at University of Oxford in United Kingdom
Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
(e.g., SLURM). It is desirable that you hold a first degree in Genomic Medicine, Statistical Genetics, Bioinformatics, or a related quantitative discipline and have experience of independently managing a
-
will include comparisons from within the Fungi to comparisons stretching back to the last universal common ancestor. You must be able to conduct a range of bioinformatic approaches involving the use
-
culture and analysis, multi-omics and bioinformatics. The biological focus will be on vascular biology, immune cell function and metabolism, with an emphasis on understanding the role of new genes and
-
volcanic arc using state-of-the-art deep learning techniques and modern seismological processing workflows, reporting to Dr Sacha Lapins. This role offers an exciting opportunity to process multi-year
-
conferences. It is essential that you hold a PhD/DPhil in computational biology, genomics, bioinformatics, computer science, statistics, or a related field together with strong programming skills in Python, R
-
multivariate analyses of neural data applied to consciousness research. Diversity Committed to equality and valuing diversity Application Process You will be required to upload a covering letter/supporting
-
. Experience with modelling and simulation of stochastic processes, including birth-death processes is also required. The post is available fixed-term until 31 March 2027, funded by the Medical Research Council
-
background in engineering or physics would be desirable. Diversity Committed to equality and valuing diversity Application Process You will be required to upload a covering letter/supporting statement, CV and
-
frameworks is essential. Experience of working with UK Biobank imaging or similar large-scale population would be desirable. Diversity Committed to equality and valuing diversity Application Process You will
-
insight into genotype-phenotype relationships (Ben-Shalom et al. Biol. Psych 2017), functional mechanisms (Spratt et al. Neuron 2019), regulatory processes (Liang et al. Genome Medicine 2021), ultimately