182 phd-computer-science-fully-funded Postdoctoral research jobs at University of Oxford
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Oxford’s Department of Orthopaedics (NDORMS) as well as collaborators in Bristol and Cardiff. You should have a PhD/DPhil (or be near completion) in robotics, computer vision, machine learning or a closely
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via independent study and training courses. It is essential that you hold a PhD/DPhil (or close to completion) in mathematics, computational biology, physics or a related discipline, and have experience
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, funded by the Medical Research Council and is due to start no earlier than January 2026. If successful, you will use experimental approaches to contribute to a project that is investigating aspects
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of Professor Colin Akerman in the Department of Pharmacology. This is a fixed-term post, for six months, funded by the Medical Research Council and is due to start no earlier than January 2026. If successful
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for Tropical Medicine and Global Health, and the Pandemic Sciences Institute. We are seeking a Postdoctoral Researcher in Ethics and Infectious Disease to work as part of the Oxford – Johns Hopkins Global
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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
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social mobility and its relationship to economic inequality. The post holder will work with the INET Oxford programme on Economics, Inequality, and Opportunity. About you You have completed a doctorate in
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We are seeking a motivated and Talented experimentalist for a full-time Research Assistant in Quantum Thermodynamics within Professor Ares’ research group at the Department of Engineering Science
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. Iain McCulloch and is funded by the EPSRC. Find out more about the research group at: About you Applicants must hold a PhD in Chemistry, Physics or a relevant subject area, (or be close to completion
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We are looking to appoint a postdoctoral researcher, to work with a group of UK Higher Education Institutions to deliver a programme of mental health research. The work is funded by the Medical