146 algorithm-development-"St"-"St" Postdoctoral positions at University of Oxford in United Kingdom
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mechanisms by which FAT protocadherins contribute to chromosomal instability and eventually shape cancer evolution. We are seeking a highly motivated and ambitious Postdoctoral Researcher to join our team
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career development of our postdocs and research staff. To help them thrive and achieve their ambitions, we have created a comprehensive range of opportunities and initiatives designed to provide
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and manipulation and a knowledge of relevant statistical methods. You will possess exceptional organisational skills, an ability to work efficiently with collaborators and to supervise and educate
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engineering, materials science, spectroscopy or fluorescent systems. Candidates with prior experience in the design, development and engineering of luminescent sensors and pressure sensitive paints are strongly
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to evaluate and stress-test LLM agents in system-level environments. Studying adversarial threats and hijack scenarios. Developing practical safeguards and certification strategies to ensure safe execution
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12 months. The project involves developing nanopore sensing technologies for functional biomolecules and is funded by Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. Find out more about the research and group
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The Faraday Institution has funded a new research consortium project entitled “Accelerated Development of Next Generation Li-Rich 3D Cathode Materials (3D-CAT)”. This collaborative project between
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in the Department of Chemistry, University of Oxford, for a period of up to 3 years. The project involves the development of methods to use light to regulate transport of amino acids and to engineer
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organisational skills that might include, sample management, electronic lab books, working with collaborators. Ability to work supportively in a laboratory environment, and to supervise and educate junior co
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University of Oxford. The Centre aims to develop the first therapies to stimulate heart repair and regeneration in patients with heart failure, for which there are currently no effective treatments. REACT is a