89 biosensor-technology Postdoctoral positions at University of Oxford in United Kingdom
Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
researcher, with a background in Science and Technology Studies or cognate fields and the flexibility and agility to thrive working across disciplines and at the interface of research and public engagement
-
tract, how immunity develops in early life, and how it goes awry in devastating inflammatory diseases such as necrotising enterocolitis and inflammatory bowel disease. Spatial ‘omics and single cell
-
in cilia. Transport within cilia, the cell’s signalling and sensory antennae, is central to human biology. It enables these cell-surface organelles to assemble and dynamically change their proteome in
-
application. The Department holds an Athena Swan Bronze award, highlighting its commitment to promoting women in Science, Engineering and Technology.
-
technologies for deep molecular insights. Additionally, you will present your findings at national and international conferences, mentor junior researchers in the lab, and contribute to high-impact publications
-
radiation technology. Prior experience on spin-resolved ARPES or previous experience in setting up and maintain the operation of ARPES spectrometers will be an advantage. Candidates are expected
-
conferences. It is essential that you hold a PhD/DPhil in computational biology, genomics, bioinformatics, computer science, statistics, or a related field together with strong programming skills in Python, R
-
starting as soon as possible. The location of work can be Oxford or CERN. To develop the design and the technology of the vertex detector for LHCb Upgrade II through the TDR phase. The successful candidate
-
, under the direction of Prof. Sam Wolfe. It is essential to have a first degree in Linguistics, Modern Languages, Psychology, or a related discipline, possess or be very close to obtaining a PhD in
-
proteome in heart-specific cell lines and primary tissue. It will utilize disease model systems to characterize unique cell surface signatures for cardiomyocytes, coronary endothelial cells, and fibroblasts