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                and Technology (CST) at the University of Cambridge. The goal of this PhD programme is to launch one "deceptive by design" project that combines the perspectives of human-computer interaction (HCI) and 
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                non-clinical PhD studentship in cardiometabolic research, commencing October 2026 in the Department of Medicine (VPD Heart & Lung Research Institute), University of Cambridge. The project will be based 
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                Hamied Department of Chemistry. For further information about the research group, including their most recent publications, please visit their website at http://www-balasubramanian.ch.cam.ac.uk . Project 
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                PhD studentship: Defining the role of the pioneer factor FOXA1 in hormone-dependent cancer Supervisor: Professor Jason Carroll Course start date: 1st October 2026 Project details For further 
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                Supervisors: Dr Tim Halim and Dr Gregory Hamm Course start: 1st October 2026 Overview The project will be supervised by Dr Tim Halim, Dr Albert Koulman (Institute of Metabolic Science) and Dr 
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                Supervisors: Professor Greg Hannon and Dr Ben Nicholson For further information about the research group, including their most recent publications, please visit their websites: https 
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                Supervisor: Professor Richard Gilbertson and Dr Giulia Biffi For further information about the research group, please visit biffilab.wordpress.com . Project details Cancer-associated fibroblasts 
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                application of computational tools for the early detection and deconstruction of chromosomal instability in cancer” For further information about the research group, including their most recent publications 
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                radiation, such as alpha particles emitted by TAT, remain largely unexplored. Emerging data suggest that some cancer cells within the alpha particle emission path only receive sub-lethal levels of DNA damage 
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                Supervisor: Professor Jason Carroll Course start date: 1st October 2026 Project details For further information about the research group, including their most recent publications, please visit