116 development-"https:"-"https:"-"https:" Postdoctoral positions at University of Oxford
Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
and take a collaborative approach that fosters the development of professional and effective working relationships with key stakeholders. A demonstrated ability to write for publication, present
-
in tackling many global challenges, from reducing our carbon emissions to developing vaccines during a pandemic. The Department of Computer Science at Oxford is renowned for pioneering research and
-
materials. The role focuses on developing cutting‑edge simulation tools and contributing to bespoke high‑rate experiments within Oxford’s Impact Engineering Laboratory. You will be responsible
-
the research team, focusing on healthy urbanism. This role is fixed term for six months. The Role The Postdoctoral Researcher will co-develop a research proposal with the GCHU team to evaluate the healthy new
-
by Medical Research Council and is fixed-term for 30 months. This project seeks to harness recent progress to develop innovative human models that better replicate complex pain pathways. We will
-
clinical trials, and developing personalised models to understand therapy response characteristics. You will contribute to a pioneering tissue-focused research programme aimed at enhancing cure rates
-
. The postholder will be responsible for adapting existing, and developing new, analytical methodologies on both fluid and rock samples to determine helium, hydrogen and associated noble gas isotopic and other trace
-
samples and experimental models, with implications for autoimmune and metabolic disorders. As a Postdoctoral Researcher, you will primarily be responsible for the development, design, and execution
-
on research pertinent to the project. By scaling up data, compute and model size, large language models (LLMs) have gained an impressive and ever growing array of capabilities. The next phase of development
-
collaborate with other technical groups working on the design. The successful candidate will also have opportunity to conduct experiments and machine development activities on the existing accelerators. The key