150 computer-science-programming-languages-"Prof"-"Prof" Postdoctoral positions at University of Oxford
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. The post-holder will be one of six centre-funded postdoctoral researchers delivering on projects that form our core research programme. They will be a cornerstone of the centre, collaborating across our
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research programme on “Enabling consumers to make healthy financial choices”, focusing on how technological and organisational solutions can improve financial literacy and decision-making. This post, under
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role in participating in the exchange programme with Johns Hopkins University. You will also be responsible for contributing new research project ideas, managing your own administrative activities and
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researchers in the Future of Food programme at the Oxford Martin School. You must hold or be close to the completion of a doctoral degree in a relevant field (e.g. data science, industrial ecology, geography
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of collaborative projects, working closely with clinicians, imaging experts, and computational scientists across the Oxford–Novartis Collaboration for AI in Medicine. You must hold a PhD/DPhil in Statistics
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research programme at Oxford. Candidates should hold a PhD in biomedical engineering, computer science, medical physics, statistics, or a related field. A strong track record of first-/senior or co-author
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with the possibility of renewal. This project addresses the high computational and energy costs of Large Language Models (LLMs) by developing more efficient training and inference methods, particularly
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to a large-scale, interdisciplinary research programme. We are looking for someone with proven expertise in a fast-paced environment, who is committed to delivering high-quality research support and
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for this post. The successful candidate will be required to develop a personal research programme in theoretical cosmology (which may include numerical modelling and/or data analysis), interacting with faculty
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Researcher to join the Translation Biology Research Group led by Mr Alex Gordon-Weeks and Professor Kerry Fisher. The group is focussed on understanding the human tumour microenvironment (TME) and its role in