187 post-doc-image-engineering-computer-vision Postdoctoral positions at University of Oxford in Uk
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the molecular mechanisms of ribosome biogenesis dysregulation in cancer. This full-time fixed-term post is funded by Cancer Research UK for 1 year. The actual starting salary offered will be based
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valuing diversity. All applicants will be judged on merit, according to the selection criteria. This post is full time (although flexibility in the appointment is possible), until 30 June 2027 and available
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factors have resulted in substantial disruption to your work or research outputs, please explain this by providing an additional paragraph in your supporting statement. This post is full time and available
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to have significant academic and policy impact, and high visibility. The post offers an exceptional environment for academic growth, interdisciplinary collaboration, and meaningful engagement with one
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this post you will present work progress regularly and actively participate in group meetings and departmental seminars as well as submit publications to high quality refereed journals. You will contribute
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biochemical, biophysical and structural biology techniques (NMR, protein crystallography and cryo-EM) to address fundamental questions around ubiquitin regulation and function. The post-holder will have access
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income, and present detailed research proposals to senior researchers. You will also contribute to laboratory management tasks and provide guidance to less experienced team members. This post is based
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associated computing code for modelling avian influenza outbreaks in Great Britain (GB). One position will focus on modelling the risk of virus invasions into GB in different locations and at different times
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background in Linguistics, and be willing to work in a Linguistically oriented environment. The post holder must have experience with EEG and should be able to carry out EEG acquisition and analysis of EEG
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digitised corpora and analysed by the Postdoctoral Research Associate. The post is full-time and is funded by a John Fell Oxford University Press grant awarded to Professor Wolfe. The post will be held for a