86 computer-science-programming-languages-"Prof" research jobs at University of Cambridge
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Biology, Physics, Applied Mathematics, Computer Science, Bioengineering, Systems Biology or a related field. Proficiency in modelling using differential equations is required. Candidates must have
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-temperature reactor technology; experience in developing mathematical, numerical and computational models; the ability to work as part of a team with excellent communication skills. Appointment at Research Associate
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considered. Qualifications/Skills PhD degree in a programme relevant to human-computer interaction and/or critical computing, ideally in Computer Science, Industrial Engineering, Interaction Design, or a
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Applications are invited for a Research Assistant position in the group of Prof Daniel St Johnston at the Gurdon Institute, University of Cambridge. The post is available for up to 3 years, starting
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at the Yusuf Hamied Department of Chemistry, University of Cambridge to work on the BBSRC grant "A Platform for Identifying GlycoRNA and Identifying Biases in RNA Pulldown". The role is to develop methods
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applicants Access and outreach Graduate study How to apply Graduate Fees and Funding Graduate Accommodation Graduation Student Hub Research Fellows Research opportunities The Silk Roads Programme Library
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; Chemistry; Computer Science; Ecology; Engineering; Environmental Sciences; Mathematics/Mathematical Sciences; Medicine; Natural Sciences; Physics; Psychology; Veterinary Sciences. This Fellowship is intended
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of economics, programming in MATLAB and JULIA, and the Health and Retirement Study data is necessary. Understanding linkages with administrative medical records is also highly valuable. The successful candidate
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-generation AI hardware (ASIC) accelerators. The UK's Advanced Research Invention Agency (ARIA) is supporting an ambitious programme of work that aims to reduce the the cost of AI by more than 1000x: https
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Klenerman in the Yusuf Hamied Department of Chemistry, from October 2025 for up to 2 years. This is a collaborative project with Professor Clare Bryant in Clinical medicine and aims to image and characterise