29 information-security "https:" "https:" "https:" "https:" "https:" "Dr" "Dr" Postdoctoral research jobs at University of London
Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
schemes including Cycle to Work, Season Ticket Loans and help with the cost of Eyesight testing. Free parking The successful applicant will work in Dr. Hirota Imada’s lab. The post is based in Egham, Surrey
-
verification and security. Software systems that rely on message-passing concurrency are increasingly popular thanks to programming languages such as Go, Rust, Erlang, and Kotlin which support it natively
-
successful candidate will join the Intelligent Muscle Research Group, led by Dr Majid Taghavi, within the Advanced Robotics Laboratory. The role involves close collaboration with a team of researchers, led by
-
About the Role Dr. Benjamin Werner from Barts Cancer Institute in London is seeking a post doc candidate to join his team at Queen Mary University of London to work on the evolutionary dynamics
-
of this instrument ongoing, we make critical contributions to silicon sensor quality control, the initial steps of module assembly, thermal quality control of local supports. The group is led by Dr Seth Zenz, and
-
in secure environments Background in medical image analysis (CT/MRI preferred) Knowledge of detection, segmentation, and model development methods Interest in multimodal or longitudinal clinical data
-
and database synovial tissue and biospecimens. Perform histology/immunostaining (IHC/IF), RNA/DNA extraction, and gene expression profiling. Support QA audits, data analysis, and reporting. Maintain
-
About the Role This is an exciting position where applicants are invited to join a multi-disciplinary team of bioengineers, biomedical scientists, and computer scientists working together at Queen
-
how artificial intelligence is transforming welfare governance and migration management across Europe. The study spans the UK, the Netherlands and Sweden and investigates how automated decision-making
-
, yet there is still a lack of effective treatments. Recent research increasingly emphasised that changes to mechanical sensing, signalling and memory, critically influences the disease onset and