198 affective-computing-"https:"-"https:"-"https:" positions at University of Birmingham
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celebrate their success. We are committed to helping the people who work here to develop through our sector-leading Birmingham Professional programme which provides all professional services staff with
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multidimensional Inverse Synthetic Aperture (ISAR) Data- Aemelia”, funded by NSIP2/UKSA, maximize impact and pave way for the follow on projects on dual use technologies for SDA and space autonomy the position
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through sustained high value impact knowledge transfer, enterprise, business engagement, public engagement or similar activities. The candidate will also undertake clinical service as part of an honorary
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through sustained high value impact knowledge transfer, enterprise, business engagement, public engagement or similar activities. The candidate will also undertake clinical service as part of an honorary
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starting salary is normally in the range £47,389 to £56,535 with potential progression once in post to £63,606 Grade: 8 Full Time, Permanent Closing date: 30th April 2026 Academic Development Programme - new
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potential progression once in post to £39,906 Grade: 6 Full Time, Fixed Term contract up to January 2027 Closing date: 8th April 2026 Background This project is part of an industry-focused research programme
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assurance to ensure consistent, high-impact programme delivery. Stakeholder Engagement Lead the coordination of group meetings for key senior stakeholders, including complex scheduling with network leaders
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Professional programme which provides all professional services staff with development opportunities and the encouragement to reach their full potential. With almost 5,000 professional services jobs in a wide
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analytical backbone of the programme. It develops sensor-enabled diagnostic cells, multi-modal data pipelines and hybrid physics-informed machine learning approaches to understand interfacial behaviour during
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programme “Decoding Competition in the Brain”, which builds on recent advances revealing how neuromodulatory circuits reshape decision-making under conflict (Cazalé-Debat, Scheunemann et al., Nature 2024; Day