-
Birmingham 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
-
dedicated to open, inclusive and inspiring research spaces for academics and their collaborators. In addition, the University of Birmingham offers exceptional High Performance Computing facilities, including
-
contribute to the creation of knowledge by undertaking a specified range of activities within an established research programme and/or specific research project. Our international group of highly motivated and
-
within Schools and the wider community to assist families to navigate and connect to services that often prove difficult to access and support them to remain connected to these services. The Pathfinder
-
to help develop new techniques within the laboratory, help supervise project/undergraduate students, and present their data regularly at internal lab meetings and external conferences. All applicants should
-
Background The University of Birmingham and University Hospitals of Birmingham NHS Trust are one of the largest providers of clinical care and research into cancers of the pancreas, biliary tract and liver
-
skills. They will be expected to help develop new techniques within the laboratory, help supervise project/undergraduate students, and present their data regularly at internal lab meetings and external
-
. The Postdoctoral Research Fellow will: Conduct a programme of research towards achieving one or more these goals. This will include contributing to the design of experiments, growth of the necessary plant material
-
and human cell lines, using multistage fragmentation (MSⁿ) data and computational methods and approaches (e.g. spectral matching, network-based approaches, and machine learning techniques, etc). Design
-
treatment and reducing brain injuries Modern MRI scans tell us about a tumour’s biology. Through advanced computing (radiomics), it is possible to extract much more information from MRI images than is visible