77 assistant-professor-computer-science "https:" "https:" "https:" "https:" "UCL" "UCL" "UCL" PhD positions at University of Nottingham
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This exciting opportunity is based within the Power Electronics and Machines Control Research Institute at Faculty of Engineering which conducts cutting edge research into power electronics
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This exciting opportunity is based within the Advanced Materials Research Group at Faculty of Engineering which conducts cutting edge research into high value product extraction from UK seaweeds
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The Manufacturing Technology Centre UK, and the University of Nottingham This project offers an exciting opportunity to undertake industrially linked research with engineering teams
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of Computer Science Postgraduate Research Administration Team at: ps-cs-pgr@exmail.nottingham.ac.uk You may also contact prospective supervisors directly.
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environment for PGRs. PGRs benefit from training through the Researcher Academy’s Training Programme, those based within the Faculty of Engineering have access to bespoke courses developed for Engineering PGRs
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in a relevant subject – Biomedical Sciences, Biomedical/Information Engineering, Computer Science, Analytical Bioscience, Physics or related disciplines. Prior experience with medical imaging
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(particularly cognitive or applied psychology) Cognitive Science Human–Computer Interaction Engineering or Computer Science Health sciences Experience in empirical research, experimental design, data analysis
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, Computer Science and the Biosciences. You will be supervised by Amanda Wright (Optics and Photonics Research Group, Faculty of Engineering), Mike Somekh (Optics and Photonics Research Group, Faculty
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subject – Biomedical Sciences, Biomedical/Information Engineering, Computer Science, Analytical Bioscience, Physics or related disciplines. Prior experience with medical imaging, particularly MRI, medical
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engineering excellence needed for the aerospace sector. In this PhD, high-fidelity two-phase Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) methods will be used to model complex and fundamental cryogenic hydrogen flows