174 phd-position-for-fully-funded-reserch-in-computer-vision Postdoctoral positions 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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We are seeking a full-time Postdoctoral Research Assistant in Computer Vision to join the Visual Geometry Group (Central Oxford). The post is funded by ERC and is fixed-term for 1.5 years with a
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funded by UKRI EPSRC and is fixed term for 12 months. You will be contributing to joint UKRI EPSRC – NSF CBET project on sustainable computer networks, with a focus on carbon emissions reduction and
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O’Brien’s research groups at the Department of Engineering Science (Central Oxford). The post is fixed term for two years and is funded by the EPSRC. The development of large-scale quantum computers will
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depending on funding. The Oxford Ion Trap Quantum Computing group currently hosts one of the world’s highest performance networked quantum computing demonstrators, capable of remote Bell-pair production
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will have a PhD in a relevant scientific discipline and sufficient specialist knowledge relevant to the project to be able to make a start on day one – we do not expect everyone to have all the skills
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-year position funded by a Wellcome Neuroscience in Mental Health award. The GPS (Goal Planning in Psychosis) study is a unique cross-disciplinary, cross-species programme investigating how prefrontal
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will write research articles and present the results at national and international conferences. It is essential that you hold a PhD/DPhil in computational biology, genomics, bioinformatics
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The post holder will develop computational models of learning processes in cortical networks. The research will employ mathematical modelling and computer simulation to identify synaptic plasticity
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About the role We are seeking a highly motivated, a postdoctoral researcher in computational biology. We investigate how immune cells interact with their environment in the human gastrointestinal