33 associate-professor-computer-science-"https:"-"https:"-"https:" Postdoctoral positions at University of Liverpool
Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Computer Science, Chemistry, Chemical Engineering, Physics, or Materials Science. You will develop optimisation and machine-learning algorithms for human- and literature-informed discovery of new materials
-
Applications are invited for a post-doctoral research associate (PDRA) position within the Mechanical and Geological Model Analogues (MAGMA) Laboratory in the Department of Earth, Ocean and
-
A National Institute of Health and Care Research (NIHR) Health Technology Assessment funded Postdoctoral Research Associate (PDRA) position is available at the Department of Cardiovascular and
-
for the design of sustainable organocatalysts. The project will be supervised by Dr John Ward and Professor Donna Blackmond FRS at the University of Liverpool, and Dr Alexander Ganose at Imperial College London
-
POSTDOCTORAL RESEARCH ASSOCIATE IN ARTHROPOD CELL LINE CHARACTERISATION Apply Department: : Infection Biology & Microbiomes Job Reference: : 107333 Salary : £39,906 - £46,049 pa Closing Date : 06-Apr-2026 23:30
-
A Postdoctoral Research Associate position is available in the research group of Professor Andy Cooper. You will bring your specialist expertise to strengthen areas that are relevant to our research
-
We are seeking to appoint a postdoctoral researcher to join our programme on application-specific detector R&D for physics experiments, supported by the UK Science and Technology Facilities Council
-
of benthic and demersal fish. The role is part of a grant led by University of Liverpool, funded by the Human Frontier Science Programme (HFSP), entitled Vibrational sensing and production in fishes
-
antifungal combinations to research programmes to address the global threat of antimicrobial resistance (AMR). We are looking for a Grade 7 PDRA in molecular biology who will join an established group
-
of researchers to develop new heterogeneous catalysts for conversion of CO2 to light olefins using high-throughput experimental techniques and AI tools. You will have a PhD in chemistry or chemical engineering, a