15 scholarship-phd-agent-based-modelling PhD positions at The University of Edinburgh
Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
One fully funded, full-time PhD position to work with Alessandro Suglia in the Embodied, Situated, and Grounded Intelligence (ESGI) group at the School of Informatics, University of Edinburgh
-
The School of Economics at the University of Edinburgh is offering a number of scholarships for PhD study starting in September 2026. All of the scholarships are awarded on academic merit. To obtain
-
they will be based. As this project will complement other research with commercial applications and/or industrial partners, the student will be required to assign intellectual property arising from their PhD
-
Deadline: Monday 15th December, 2025. Competition funded PhD Project. Supervisors: Dr Ananda Mirchandani (The University of Edinburgh), Dr Tony Ly (The University of Dundee) About the Project As
-
Deadline: Monday 15th December, 2025. Competition funded PhD Project. Supervisors: Dr Laura McCulloch (The University of Edinburgh), Dr Joy Edwards-Hicks (The University of Edinburgh) About the
-
A fully funded four-year PhD position is available to work on the project titled “Fault-Tolerant Architectures for Superconducting Qubit Quantum Computers”. This position is a collaborative
-
Applications accepted up till Monday 15th December, 2025. Competition funded PhD Project. Supervisors: Dr Yi Feng (The University of Edinburgh), Dr Mattias Malaguti (The University of Edinburgh
-
Deadline: Monday 15th December, 2025. Competition funded PhD Project. Supervisors: Dr. Chih-Jen Lin (The University of Edinburgh), Dr. Pierre O. Bagnaninchi (The University of Edinburgh) About
-
PhD Studentship - EASTBIO - The Impact of Diet-microbiome-immune Interactions on Intestinal Function
Deadline: Monday 15th December, 2025. Competition funded PhD Project. Supervisors: Dr. Chengcan Yao (The University of Edinburgh), Dr. Laura Glendinning (The University of Edinburgh), Dr. Cecile
-
work is linking microscopic (discrete) mechanics to macroscopic (continuum) models of active slender systems. The project involves three main components: Theoretical continuum modelling. Extend classical