25 assistant-professor-computer-science-"https:"-"https:"-"https:"-"https:"-"UCL" Postdoctoral positions at University of London
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Trust-funded project on Plasma-Assisted Combustion (PAC) Modelling of Ammonia, in collaboration with the York Plasma Institute. The successful candidate will develop and apply advanced computational
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School, we are known for our pioneering research and pride ourselves on our international reputation. We are equal first in the UK for the impact of our Computer Science research, and second for our
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behaviour observed in laboratory studies. You will work closely with Professor Kostas Stathis (Department of Computer Science, Co-Investigator) and Professor David Levine (Leverhulme Fellow and Principal
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and Immigration website . Full-Time, Fixed-Term (48 months) Applications are invited for a 4-year, full-time Postdoctoral Research Assistant position in the Department of Psychology at Royal Holloway
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Computer Science at Queen Mary University of London, working with Professor Rachel Humphris and Dr Dimitrios Kollias. The successful applicant will undertake computational research, including algorithmic
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About the role This role supports a multidisciplinary programme investigating the role of the Maresins, a family of pro-resolving lipid mediators, in early cancer development. You will process
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to a broader computational strategy for next‑generation polymer design. About You You will have, or be close to completing, a PhD in materials science, engineering, physics, chemistry, or a related area
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Mary University of London and will work under the supervision of Professor Rachel Humphris. They will lead in-depth ethnographic fieldwork in Sweden, undertaking interviews and participant observation
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nearing completion) in Bioinformatics, Computational Biology, Genomics, or a related field, and proven experience in analysing high-throughput sequencing data. They will be proficient in R and/or Python and
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under the supervision of Professor Rachel Humphris. They will lead in-depth ethnographic fieldwork in the Netherlands, undertaking interviews and participant observation to trace how welfare algorithms