55 phd-position-in-computer-vision PhD positions at University of Birmingham in United Kingdom
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Researcher Profile First Stage Researcher (R1) Positions PhD Positions Country United Kingdom Application Deadline 16 Oct 2025 - 23:59 (Europe/London) Type of Contract Temporary Job Status Full-time Offer
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and imperfections, making them both conceptually deep and technologically promising. This theoretical PhD project will investigate how topology and quantum geometry emerge and intertwine such as
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. Yet, many stellar and planetary parameters remain systematically uncertain due to limitations in stellar modelling and data interpretation. This PhD project will develop Bayesian Hierarchical Models
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avenues by enabling chronic, gut-based monitoring of neuroendocrine activity for applications such as closed loop therapeutics. The proposed PhD project sits at the interface of biomedical engineering
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Project Description: This EPSRC-funded PhD project will investigate how next-generation electric and autonomous vehicles can operate as symbiotic agents within the urban ecosystem—intelligently
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coherence bandwidth and thus bit rate are maximised. The PhD project will explore new techniques to overcome incoherent scattering in THz communications. The overall research aim is to lay down a measurement
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We invite applications for a fully funded PhD studentship (3.5 years) hosted by the University of Birmingham and conducted in collaboration with the UK Met Office. This project is ideal for
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International Ocean Discovery Program (IODP) Expedition 395 (June-August 2023), has shown tipping point behaviour during the Pliocene in the deep-water return flow of the AMOC (Sinneseal et al. 2025). The aim
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Programme (DTP), offering one home and one overseas 3.5-year studentship covering full tuition fees and a standard UKRI stipend. For further details of how to apply, please click on the 'Apply' button above.
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There is widespread concern about the negative impacts of plastic and other anthropogenic solid waste (hereafter referred to as ‘plastics’) on global biodiversity (Law, 2017; Lau et al., 2020). Such materials are extremely slow to break down, which has resulted in discarded micro- and...