74 channel-coding-electrical-engineering Postdoctoral positions at University of Oxford
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independent study and training courses. It is essential that you hold a PhD/DPhil (or close to completion) in mathematics, statistics, physics, engineering, data science or a related discipline, and have
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The Kelly lab welcomes individuals with diverse career backgrounds – PhD-level scientists in any discipline with expertise in data and programming, or software engineers outside of academia looking to change
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Location: Department of Oncology, Old Road Campus Research Building & Institute of Biomedical Engineering (IBME), and Botnar Research Centre, Oxford Contract Type: Fixed-term for 12 months, with
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Health, Geography, Global Affairs, or a related field, possess sufficient specialist knowledge in the discipline to work within established research programmes, experience writing computer code in Stata
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. The position is available for a fixed term of 36 months from time of appointment. This project is associated with a new EPSRC/UKRI-funded project entitled “Mastering charge-lattice interactions in novel
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- the English Case Study investigating SSVS pilot project courts. This includes data collection, including court observation and participants interviews, coding and analysis of data, the development of project
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induced by radiotherapy. You will employ a broad range of experimental approaches, including cell line engineering, transcriptional reporter assays, flow cytometry, qRT-PCR, ELISA, and CRISPR-based genetic
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for structural characterisation of glycoproteins using trapped ion mobility spectrometry and ion activation strategies (e.g. EID and photo-dissociation). The project will entail improving the current capability
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The current post is within the activities of the recently established MRC/BHF Centre of Research Excellence (CoRE) in Advanced Cardiac Therapies (REACT). The Centre aims to develop the first
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About the role We are seeking a highly motivated and ambitious Postdoctoral Researcher to join our team in addressing a key question in cancer biology: why brain cancer cells resist current