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Deadline: Monday 15th December, 2025. Competition funded PhD Project. Supervisors: Prof David Dockrell (The University of Edinburgh), Dr Brian McHugh (The University of Edinburgh), Dr Clark Russell (The University of Edinburgh) About the Project Macrophages are key innate immune cells with...
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Deadline: 27th February 2026 One fully funded, full-time PhD position to work with Dr. Eleonora D’Arnese at the School of Informatics, University of Edinburgh. The aim of this project is to develop
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supervised by: Dr Joschka Roffe, School of Informatics, University of Edinburgh Dr Stergios Koutsioumpas, School of Informatics, University of Edinburgh Dr Vivek Chidambaram, National Quantum Computing Centre
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to the university, as a condition of accepting the offer. The PhD is fully-funded for Home Students/EU students, with a budget for research consumables. [1] Dunn, K.E. The emerging science of electrosynbionics
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interdisciplinary environment, gaining expertise in: Biomedical image analysis, omics, genome editing, and molecular biology High-content and label-free imaging Tissue culture, microfluidics, and bioengineering
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One fully funded, full-time PhD position to work with Alessandro Suglia in the Embodied, Situated, and Grounded Intelligence (ESGI) group at the School of Informatics, University of Edinburgh
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30 Oct 2025 Job Information Organisation/Company The University of Edinburgh Department School of Engineering Research Field Engineering » Civil engineering Engineering » Geological engineering
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that respond dynamically to external forces. Such possibilities challenge conventional thinking in engineering and design. By studying how stresses, geometry, and material properties interact, we can develop
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, process stability, and the downstream consolidation and performance of remanufactured composites. This fully-funded PhD project fits within a wider research programme with industrial partners and an
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Do you want to design and construct synthetic life-like cells? A major goal of synthetic biology is to create life-like artificial cells from non-living components, i.e. the bottom-up approach