400 parallel-processing-bioinformatics positions at University of Sheffield in United Kingdom
Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Listed
-
Category
-
Program
-
Field
-
vibrant and progressive place to undertake research. The Natural Language Processing Research Group, established in 1993, is one of the largest and most successful language processing groups in the UK and
-
. Provide technical support, including training, operation, running samples, demonstrating and troubleshooting laboratory equipment. Understand, promote and apply relevant COSHH/risk assessments and
-
academic staff who supervise PGR research programmes. You will ensure delivery of a range of processes and procedures and ensure that student feedback is heard and responded to. Main duties and
-
operations of the Liquefier. The facility produces approximately 80,000 liquid litres per annum, which supports the low temperature research in the department. The helium liquefier is a complex process which
-
Kenny-Levick, lead recruiter: on e.l.kenny-levick@sheffield.ac.uk Next steps in the recruitment process It is anticipated that the selection process will take place in October 2025. This will consist
-
For informal enquiries about this job contact Leo Appleton, School Director of Education: on l.appleton@sheffield.ac.uk or on 0114 222 2633 Next steps in the recruitment process It is anticipated
-
to establish a research portfolio and technology roadmap around the remit of the development of AM processes, materials, AM process simulations, online/offline process monitoring and control tools as
-
Support processes that help to gather feedback from our students and inform students of what changes we have made in response to their feedback. This may involve improving engagement with Student-Staff
-
and computer simulated EIS spectra. Develop a prototype decision support system dedicated to the EIS based oral cancer diagnosis and implement the system on a dedicated PC for both project demonstration
-
these observations is that biases in the perceptual systems used by animals (including humans) to detect and process sensory information have played an important role in shaping communication signal evolution. In