198 phd-scholarship-in-computational-material-science Postdoctoral positions at University of Oxford in Uk
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leading academic and industry experts, and an active academic/industry exchange program that aims to accelerate career development for the postholder employed on the project. About you The postholder should
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the UKRI through the Frontier Guarantee Programme to Dr Jani R Bolla. The work is to be conducted in his lab in the Department Biology, University of Oxford, South Parks Road, Oxford, OX1 3RB
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relevant skills acquired and will also be determined by the funding available. About you Applicants will hold a PhD/DPhil or be near completion of a PhD/DPhil in a subject relative to Structural Biology
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, physics and astronomy, applied mathematics, statistics, computer science, etc.). The Research Associate will need to be proactive, working both independently and as part of ECI/SoGE climate community and
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will have or be close to the completion of a PhD in Neuroscience, Psychology or a closely related discipline. With in-depth knowledge of cognitive and computational neuroscience including motivation
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base, the partnership will bring together the University of Oxford’s expertise in statistics, mathematics, engineering and AI with industry scientists. Within the partnership, small research teams will
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and science exploitation of the MIGHTEE survey data. The postholder would have the opportunity to identify new discoveries in the data and would be ideally placed to lead the science based on the data
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We are seeking a talented and motivated researcher to join the Mead Group to contribute to a major research programme, focused on understanding and preventing disease progression in
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Leedham (colorectal cancer biology), Dan Woodcock (cancer genomics), Helen Byrne (mathematical modelling), and Jens Rittscher (computational pathology and imaging AI), offering a unique opportunity to work
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to study health and disease. Accordingly, almost all of contemporary biological science research is critically dependent on our ability to identify which genes are related in different species. The Kelly