124 postdoc-computational-fluid-dynamics Postdoctoral positions at University of Oxford in United Kingdom
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researchers will extend and apply the ideas of active matter physics in biological contexts, developing theories and cell-scale and continuum computational models. The work will focus on identifying physical
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social mobility and its relationship to economic inequality. The post holder will work with the INET Oxford programme on Economics, Inequality, and Opportunity. About you You have completed a doctorate in
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About the role The Kelly lab is excited to announce a new post-doctoral position in computational biology. This position is funded as part of an international consortium of scientists who
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. The post-holder will be one of six centre-funded postdoctoral researchers delivering on projects that form our core research programme. They will be a cornerstone of the centre, collaborating across our
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. The Preston lab is highly interdisciplinary and collaborative and co-located with a dynamic cluster of research groups studying plant biology, microbiology and plant-microbe interactions. You will hold, or be
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exciting opportunity to join the dynamic research group on Digital Ethics and Defence Technologies, contributing to pioneering work at the forefront of AI and ethics. The role focuses on innovative research
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About the role We have an exciting opportunity to join the Wood Lab in the Department of Paediatrics as our Postdoctoral Researcher This role is part of a larger interdisciplinary program focused
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Baker). The subject of the research project within the Division of Cardiovascular Medicine, University of Oxford is to re-programme immune cells as part of a larger programme to develop novel therapeutics
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to enable robust robot autonomy in complex, real-world environments. The post sits within our EPSRC Programme Grant in Embodied Intelligence and will advance the state of the art in localisation and scene
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About the role We have an exciting opportunity to join the dynamic research group led by Dr Jie Yang in the Department of Oncology at the University of Oxford. The group conducts research on T cell