52 scientific-computing Postdoctoral positions at University of Oxford in United Kingdom
Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
and make major contributions to the work of the group The Post Doctoral Researcher will be the senior scientist leading the discovery science research supporting the BHF Professorship award to Prof
-
on process development, electrode manufacture and performance assessment, but depending on the skills of the successful applicant, may also involve some aspects of modelling or data science. The post is funded
-
using in vivo models. The role will also include supporting the general program of research within the pre-clinical team. You will work in Containment level 2 and 3 facilities to assist with murine
-
science, with applications to public and veterinary health, therapeutic development, and pandemic preparedness. You will contribute to method development, data analysis, and collaborative projects, and will
-
scientific oversight from Oxford Principal Investigators and GSK scientists, the centre will initially focus on some of the following thematic areas: • Decision analysis under model misspecification
-
and social data with the aim to better understand energy use. The programme is an interdisciplinary collaboration between the School of Geography and the Environment (Oxford), the Department
-
. You will be responsible for managing your own academic research, collaborating with computational and clinical researchers, and contributing to the scientific development of the lab. This is an exciting
-
, and computational science while developing a broad skill set. The successful candidate will have, or be close to completion of, a PhD in a discipline closely related to neuroscience. With experience in
-
online application. The Department holds an Athena Swan Bronze award, highlighting its commitment to promoting women in Science, Engineering and Technology.
-
relevant for drug discovery analysis pipelines, trial design and operational efficiency. Led by Professor Chris Holmes, and with scientific oversight from Oxford Principal Investigators and GSK scientists