194 post-doc-image-engineering-computer-vision Postdoctoral positions at University of Oxford in Uk
-
candidate will hold a PhD in physics, biophysics, physical chemistry, engineering, or a related area, or have submitted a PhD thesis prior to taking up the appointment. The research requires strong interest
-
About the role We are seeking a full-time Postdoctoral Research Assistant to join the Numerical Analysis research group at the Department of Engineering Science (Osney). The post is funded by Rolls
-
with an international reputation for excellence. The Department has a substantial research programme, with major funding from Medical Research Council (MRC), Wellcome Trust and National Institute
-
About the role We are seeking a full-time Postdoctoral Research Assistant to join the Hypersonics research group at the Department of Engineering Science, Osney. The post is fixed for 19 months with
-
, fixed-term for two years, and supported by a grant from the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC), grant reference EP/X026647/1. This position is to start for the 2026-27 academic
-
-linear systems of ordinary differential equations and the proficient use statistical programming languages (R, Julia or Python), Bash computing and the development of computational packages are essential
-
Control Group at the Department of Engineering Science in-person in central Oxford. The post is funded by UKRI and Fortescue Zero and is fixed-term for 30 months or until 30/04/29, whichever is shorter
-
Oxford. The post-holder is required to hold a PhD/DPhil in a relevant discipline and will carry out independent research exploring fundamental mechanisms of mechanotransduction and its role in
-
We are seeking a Postdoctoral Research Assistant in Cellular Neuroscience to work in the group of Professor Colin Akerman in the Department of Pharmacology. This is a fixed-term post, for six months
-
June 2027 Hours: Full-time About the role We are looking for an enthusiastic post-doctoral scientist to work on a new international collaborative project between the University of Oxford (SimonBuczacki