126 engineering-computation "https:" "https:" "https:" "https:" "https:" "U.S" Postdoctoral research jobs at University of Oxford
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of Oxford. The Podium Institute sits within the Institute of Biomedical Engineering (IBME) in the University’s Department of Engineering Science and is supported by a £25m 10-year donation to the University
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The Kelly lab welcomes individuals with diverse career backgrounds – PhD-level scientists in any discipline with expertise in data and programming, or software engineers outside of academia looking to change
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, fixed-term for two years, and supported by a grant from the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC), grant reference EP/X026647/1. This position is to start for the 2026-27 academic
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therapy. The work involves applying molecular engineering strategies to enhance the potency and selectivity of antibodies against solid tumours. With a strong emphasis on translational research. You will be
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Control Group at the Department of Engineering Science in-person in central Oxford. The post is funded by UKRI and Fortescue Zero and is fixed-term for 30 months or until 30/04/29, whichever is shorter
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to reduce inequality in high-income countries, and/or (3) the study of social mobility and its relationship to economic inequality. The post holder will work with the INET Oxford programme on Economics
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program exploring the role of fluctuations in molecular transport processes by studying highly controlled experimental models at the meso- and nanoscale, funded by a UKRI Frontier Research Guarantee Grant
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to develop a program of work investigating how brains use internal models of task and world structure to enable flexible goal-directed behaviour. The experiments will involve recording and/or manipulating
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towns programme, organise and run patient and public involvement events to engage with community members and innovate, contribute to and promote the research, publication and impact focus of the centre in
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will contribute to an exciting, interdisciplinary programme developing next-generation human in vitro models of pain. The project aims to recreate the complex multicellular interactions that underlie