280 programming-language-"St"-"University-of-St"-"FEMTO-ST"-"ST" positions at KINGS COLLEGE LONDON
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representing exceptional strength in both the longer established disciplines (such as Philosophy, Classics, English, History, Languages, Music Philosophy and Theology) and world-leading quality in more recently
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About us: Student Futures is a major multi-year programme delivering a number of projects and it is one of three programmes which the Transformation Office Directorate are responsible for delivering
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contract. About you: To be successful in this role, we are looking for candidates to have the following skills and experience: Essential criteria GCSE Mathematics and English Language, at least Grade C
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. Through our Access & Participation Plan 2025–2029, we have made ambitious commitments to expand of this work to improve young people’s educational outcomes and address challenges to university access and
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the development of a wellbeing awareness programme across King’s Residences, working to improve accessibility and ensure every resident has the opportunity to thrive during their time at university
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criteria Basic understanding of English & Maths (roughly equivalent to GSCE grade D-G (or 1-3) Excellent communication skills Good command of the English Language Ability to follow written/oral instruction
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(GNNs), and vision-language models (VLMs). You will work on multimodal learning tasks that require integrating diverse data types to uncover predictive and explainable biomarkers of cancer progression and
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Strong background in computational neuroscience and neural modelling Proficiency in programming (e.g., Python, MATLAB, and similar languages) Experience with large-scale neural network simulations
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individual and collective wellbeing. Employee support at King’s includes flexible working arrangements, paid maternity/shared parental leave, menopausal support, an active wellbeing programme, training and
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associate with expertise in data science to join the King’s BHF Centre of Research Excellence and contribute to a growing cardio-immunology research programme. Inflammation is increasingly recognised as a key