42 parallel-processing-bioinformatics Fellowship research jobs at University of Birmingham
Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
of the responsibilities outlined below Design and conduct bioinformatic data analysis pipelines under the guidance of the research supervisor to test the project hypotheses and complete project aims Develop research
-
group but work closely with the Birmingham team and be formally employed by the University of Birmingham. Role Summary Provide bioinformatics support to the BRC OGS Theme Process and analyse ‘omics data
-
be ideally be proficient with microbial genetics, molecular microbiology, basic tissue culture and molecular biology techniques. Prior experience with bioinformatics (microbial sequencing and
-
bioinformatics. The successful candidate will join a team with a strong track record in developing computational tools and informatics infrastructure for metabolomics applications in toxicology, systems biology
-
the context of our commitments to the ATLAS Experiment at the CERN Large Hadron Collider. This will involve undertaking specified activities in the operation, performance-optimisation and exploitation
-
management/administration arising from research, including ensuring that the information and records processed on behalf of the University are managed in compliance with ALL applicable legislation, codes and
-
reasoning, machine learning, or equivalent qualifications Proven ability to publish in top-tier conferences and journals in AI, computer-aided verification, automated reasoning, or quantum computing
-
predictions and to generate hydrological forecasts. The RF will be part of a research environment with strong ML activities. The post is mainly part of the project ‘HEavy Precipitation forecast Post-processing
-
intervention delivery and implementation in NHS settings Liaise with NHS multidisciplinary teams to support research and intervention delivery Support patient recruitment and consent processes in accordance with
-
project will focus on scaling-up the technology and transferring existing knowledge of this process from the University of Birmingham to Salinity Solutions, where it can be commercialised and accelerate