175 software-verification-computer-science Postdoctoral positions at University of Oxford in Uk
-
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
-
strategic programme. Through multiomic and spatial biology exploration of temporally distinct samples from clinical trials and advanced biological models, an international consortium of leading colorectal
-
inference attacks, to mitigate privacy leaks in MMFM. You will hold a PhD/DPhil (or be near completion) in a relevant discipline such as computer science, data science, statistics or mathematics; expertise in
-
on evaluating the abilities of large language models (LLMs) of replicating results from the arXiv.org repository across computational sciences and engineering. You should have a PhD/DPhil (or be near completion
-
research environment supported by a team with broad expertise in data science, infectious diseases, hepatology, and clinical informatics. You will take a leading role in analysing large-scale, longitudinal
-
Mobility Reading Group led by Nobuko Yoshida. The successful candidate will be located in the Department of Computer Science Reporting to Professor Nobuko Yoshida, the post holder will be responsible
-
the performance of lithium ion technologies. To support the programme, the post holder will be required to carry out research on characterisation of battery degradation, with a particular focus on the application
-
have completed, or be close to completing, a PhD/DPhil in a relevant quantitative field such as computational social science, computer science, or cognitive science. They will have a demonstrable track
-
. The post-holder will be responsible for managing their own academic research programme in Salmonella effector biology. You will have a high degree of autonomy to develop the methodology and experimental
-
and leading a programme of numerical simulations relating to all aspects of our research on P-MoPAs; using particle-in-cell computer codes hosted on local and national high-performance computing