39 phd-in-software-engineering-positions-in-sweeden Fellowship positions at UNIVERSITY OF SOUTHAMPTON
Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
The position will be held in the Centre for Cancer Immunology at Southampton General Hospital. This Centre builds on a 40-year history of pioneering immunology and cancer research at Southampton and
-
of the role. Applications for Research Fellow positions will be considered from candidates who are working towards or nearing completion of a relevant PhD qualification. The title of Research Fellow will be
-
filled. Applications for Research Fellow positions will be considered from candidates who are working towards or nearing completion of a relevant PhD qualification. The title of Research Fellow will be
-
the TDHVL that includes academic staff, postdoctoral researchers, engineers, PhD and undergraduate students. For further details on our laboratory, please see: http://www.highvoltage.ecs.soton.ac.uk/ You
-
excellent knowledge of advanced statistical methods and experience in analysing large-scale datasets, as well as solid practical experience in the use of STATA, R or a similar software package, and good
-
A position is available in the Faculty of Medicine at the University of Southampton for a Research Fellow with experience in statistics or epidemiology and an interest in preconception, maternal and
-
information about this position in advance of submitting your application. Equality, diversity and inclusion are central to the ethos in the School of Engineering. We give full consideration to applicants who
-
We are inviting applications for two two-year Research Fellow position as part of a European Research Council Starting Grant (funded by the UKRI) based in the School of Psychology at the University
-
The University of Southampton is committed to excellence in all we do, applying our insights and inventiveness to solve complex engineering and environmental challenges. As a world-leading, research
-
have to recover?” A question within interactive technology of course is how does technology embody the interests that inform the shape of work, and what normalises those practices, not unusually