132 algorithm-development-"St"-"St" Postdoctoral positions at University of Oxford in United Kingdom
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Applications are invited for an exceptional Postdoctoral Scientist to the join the group of Prof. Claus Nerlov to study blood cell development, with particular emphasis on mechanisms of HSC ageing
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. The post holder will be a member of a research group with responsibility for carrying out research for NERC grant ‘Cruising the whale superhighway: The evolution, biomechanics, and ecological drivers
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precancers and developing targeted interventions, including vaccines, to intercept them. The project focuses on designing, validating, and preclinically testing neoepitope-based mRNA vaccines to prevent BRCA
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with the possibility of renewal. This project addresses the high computational and energy costs of Large Language Models (LLMs) by developing more efficient training and inference methods, particularly
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of comparative genomics and molecular evolution analyses to identify these targets. The project will make use of software developed in the Kelly group as well as other widely used software for biological sequence
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, defensive mechanisms and related topics to the safe deployment of systems contain multiple LLM and VLM powered models. You will be responsible for Developing and implementing; capability evaluations, attacks
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a highly-motivated and technically-skilled scientist to join our team in pushing networked-based quantum computing to the next level. As well as driving forward the design, development and
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challenges, from reducing our carbon emissions to developing vaccines during a pandemic. The Department of Psychiatry is based on the Warneford Hospital site in Oxford – a friendly, welcoming place of work
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calculations and Brownian Dynamics simulations. The group is looking for a highly motivated and driven postdoctoral researcher to contribute strongly to a wave of ongoing developments deploying this technology
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on the electrosolvation force under development in the group. The planned investigations are primarily experimental in nature, but will proceed in close conjunction with insight from theory and simulations. The ideal