12 professor-computer-"https:"-"https:"-"https:"-"VIETNAMESE-GERMAN-UNIVERSITY" PhD positions at University of Exeter
Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Fully-funded PhD Studentship – Next-Generation Integrated Opto-Electronic Devices for Switching, Computing, and Sensing We are offering a fully-funded PhD studentship in the field of photonics and
-
PhD Studentship in Computational Modelling and Optimisation of Plasma Systems We invite applications for a fully funded PhD studentship focused on the computational modelling and optimisation
-
awareness These funded PhD scholarships are suitable for students with a background in Computer Science, Mathematics, Engineering and Cognitive Science. Students with interests in machine learning, deep
-
collaboration between the Universities of Exeter and Newcastle. Exeter has internationally recognised expertise in multi-omics, state-of-the-art sequencing, and computational pipelines. The Exeter team has led
-
CD3 is a new, multidisciplinary and multi-institutional strategic national research programme dedicated to using data to transform our understanding of cancer risk and enable early interception
-
undergraduate degree (or international equivalent) in Engineering, Industrial Engineering, Manufacturing Engineering, Systems Engineering, Operations Management, Computer Science, or a related field. A master's
-
clinically meaningful explanations. Finally, the project will develop new evaluation frameworks to assess reasoning quality, robustness, computational efficiency, and real-world clinical usefulness, supporting
-
, etc.), or the equivalent qualifications gained outside the UK, in a relevant area of Physical Science, Materials Science, or Engineering. You should be able to demonstrate some computational
-
an interest in computer science and/or computational approaches to engineering applied to this important maritime topic and will be willing to travel to partners within the UK (e.g. Newcastle and Bath
-
PhD Studentship: Subcortical brain development and disorders, funded PhD at the University of Exeter
Decoding the precise programme regulating neurodevelopment has been crucial to our understanding of brain disorders. A central question is how the brain generates its remarkable diversity of cell