122 computer-programmer-"https:"-"Inserm"-"FEMTO-ST" "https:" "https:" "https:" "https:" positions at University of Bristol
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Faculty of Engineering, and how the Faculty supports people to achieve their potential, please see our staff blog: https://engineering.blogs.bristol.ac.uk/category/engineering-includes-me/ Contract type
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equitable community. For further information, see: School of Earth Sciences (including EDI page): http://www.bristol.ac.uk/earthsciences/ OGU: http://www.bristol.ac.uk/chemistry/research/ogu/ CERES: https
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blog: https://engineering.blogs.bristol.ac.uk/category/engineering-includes-me/ Contract type: Open ended with fixed funding until 30/09/2028 Work pattern: Full time Grade: I / J / K Salary: Grade I
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, these tools have historically suffered from high computational costs preventing their large-scale use in an industrial environment. The role holder will develop and deploy theory-guided machine learning
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of their research specialism and demonstrate plans to develop research activities and how this will link to and expand existing research activities. This post will support the undergraduate programme in Aerospace
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at the interface of Fintech and AI, and in areas related to computational finance and financial engineering, for example: AI for finance, automated trading, agent-based modelling of financial systems, blockchain
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at the University of Bristol and our research is highly interdisciplinary, with opportunities for collaboration nationally and internationally. More information about our research can be found here: https
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domains such as Medicine and Healthcare, Robotics and/or Autonomous Systems, or Computational Neuroscience. The University of Bristol has a longstanding research tradition in AI dating back over more than
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our interdisciplinary research culture in one of the four broad domains: data science for psychiatry and mental health-care; data-intensive computational neuroscience; data-intensive bioinformatics; and
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live-imaging, immunohistochemical, and transcriptomic studies of wound repair using zebrafish and arabidopsis models tissue damage/repair. You will join the lab of Professor Paul Martin, (http