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benefit from: Extensive opportunities for collaboration between the University of Southampton, King’s College, and University of Surrey, as well as external, international project partners (e.g., Stanford
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findings at top-tier venues (e.g., NeurIPS, ICLR, ICML, IEEE Transactions); Collaborate with our internal and external partners (e.g., National Oceanography Centre) to broaden the scope of your research
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, Electronics, Law, Management, Mathematics, Sociology and Psychology. Both our MEng in Computer Science and Cyber Security and MSc in Cyber Security are NCSC accredited. You will be able to work with the
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efficiently. You will be responsible for manufacturing light alloys and thermomechanical processing. You are also expected to regularly apply for beamline time and use equipment at national and international
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of energy demand and their future projections for various projects addressing the built environment. Undertake coordination of research including field work and projects’ outcomes with internal/external
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(IMF, FCA, BoE), finance and simulation (...), artificial intelligence (Turing Institute, ...), and computing and networking (Intel, Microsoft, ...). The long-term and open-ended nature of a programme
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of the position include a lot of opportunity for international travel, including the exciting opportunity to test in University of Michigan facilities. The salary of both Research Fellows can be at the highest
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experience in Physics and Optical Engineering, along with a good track record of innovative research at an international level. Experience of highly effective working in teams is also required. The Applicants
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are extremely desirable • Experience in mentorship, leadership, multi-disciplinary research, and international collaborations are desirable, This post is funded by FET-Open grant under European Union’s
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to Professor Francesco Forconi at the University of Southampton. We would like an enthusiastic team-player, contributing to an international team of scientists investigating the mechanisms of disease progression