16 postdoc-computational-fluid-dynamics-"Prof" PhD scholarships at University of Cambridge
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engineering, computational neuroscience, artificial neural networks and bio-inspired robotics: "Rhythmic-reactive regulation for robotic locomotion" (Supervisor: Prof Fulvio Forni) will apply techniques from
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to develop novel, bio-inspired neural networks that flexibly and robustly control locomotion in multi-limbed robots. "Self-organised clocks for reliable spiking computation" (Supervisor: Prof Timothy O'Leary
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Fixed-term: The funds for this post are available for 3 years. A doctoral studentship is available in the forthcoming Aspirational Computing Lab (February 2026) in the Department of Computer
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application of computational tools for the early detection and deconstruction of chromosomal instability in cancer” For further information about the research group, including their most recent publications
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Funder: Astra Zeneca Duration: 4 years from October 1st 2026 Supervisors: Prof Paul Midgley (University of Cambridge) and Dr Okky Putra (Astra Zeneca) Location: The studentship will be based in
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please e-mail Prof Jeremy J Baumberg (jjb12@cam.ac.uk ). Please quote reference KA47350 on your application and in any correspondence about this vacancy. The University actively supports equality
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://www.postgraduate.study.cam.ac.uk/courses/directory/cvmdpdmed Quote the project title and supervisors (Dr Ana Vujic / Prof Antonio Vidal-Puig). Applications must include: CV Academic transcripts Statement of purpose (research
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letter (Max 3 sides, including proposed research project) to be submitted to Dimple Patel, dp692@medschl.cam.ac.uk by July 29th 2025. Informal enquiries should be directed to Prof Menna Clatworthy
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dynamics of chromatin modifications required for transposon silencing. Project details This project aims to advance our understanding of small RNA-mediated chromatin silencing using advanced genomics and
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cancer is dynamic and dependent on ASCL1. Nat Cancer. 2024 Nov;5(11):1641-1659 https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/39394434/ ASCL1 activates neuronal stem cell-like lineage programming through remodeling