88 phd-position-in-biomedical-engineering research jobs at University of Cambridge in United Kingdom
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Two vacant Research Assistant positions exist, in the Department of Engineering, to work on the development of new highly targeted methods to deliver therapies to tumours. This is funded by an EPSRC
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King's College wishes to appoint, with effect from 1st October 2024, one Non- Stipendiary Research Fellow in any area of the Physical, Mathematical, or Engineering Sciences. Graduates of any
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A position exists, for a Research Assistant/Associate in the Department of Engineering, to work on Structural Damage Assessment & Data Analysis (Blast Loading) The post holder will be located in
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and PhD students investigating performance, reliability and security in future many-core systems. The position is within the Computer Architecture Research Group at the University of Cambridge Computer
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A position exists, for a Research Assistant/Associate in the Department of Engineering, to work on a project funded by Boeing Research and Technology on Resilient Communication Networks
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and subsequent cluster-randomised trial of proactive risk assessment within primary care. Applicants should have, or be close to completing, a PhD or equivalent qualification. Given the nature
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A position exists, for a Research Assistant/Associate in the Department of Engineering, to work on research in the fields of machine learning, hydrology, and water resources management at various
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A position exists, for a Research Assistant/Associate in the Department of Engineering, to work on a research grant that looks to advance our understanding of embodied carbon and design in the built
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methodology, relying on a dialogic approach using AI tools like ChatGPT to increase educational benefit and user engagement. Additionally, the postholder will put the technology in the hands of potential
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track record in wet-lab cell biology and possess a PhD in a relevant discipline. Prior experience of working with organoids and/or in respiratory disease research would be an advantage, but training will