129 postdoc-in-thermal-network-of-the-physical-building Postdoctoral positions at University of Oxford
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existing machine learning methods, as well as building robust, well-documented, and reproducible analytics pipelines for long-term use by the wider team. You will carry out data analysis and manage
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BBSRC grant awarded to Prof Francesco Licausi. The work is to be conducted in the Life and Mind Building, Department of Biology, University of Oxford. The postholder will work on the molecular mechanisms
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advanced fundamental physical understanding of the phenomena at play but accurate predictions in realistic geometries remain difficult. You will be responsible for implementing and validating ice accretion
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in continual learning settings. The core focus is on leveraging Reinforcement Learning (RL) to make the training and deployment of LLMs more computationally and sample efficient. This approach aims
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at: About you Applicants must hold a PhD in Biochemistry, Chemical Biology, Physics, Engineering or a relevant subject area, (or be close to completion) prior to taking up the appointment. You will be
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per week), fixed term to 31 March 2026. Currently located in the Radcliffe Observatory Quarter, Experimental Psychology will be moving to the new, purpose-built Life and Mind Building a
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funded by BBSRC and is fixed-term for 6 months. This project is to develop simple cell (SimCell, non-dividing bacteria cell) based biocatalyst to transform waste from cultured meat process into essential
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is opportunity to engage Oxford researchers with common research interests at SoGE and other Departments (e.g. a co-I, Prof Myles Allen, is a staff member of Physics and ECI/SoGE) and Schools (e.g
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atmospheric physics, meteorology, climate, numerical methods, and data science. The Research Associate will be proficient in programming/scripting (e.g., in Python, and/or R, and/or Matlab, and/or Bash script
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tomato and pepper as model systems. Work in Oxford will build on our extensive experience in studying bacterial virulence mechanisms and the role of the plant microenvironment in disease development