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Postdoctoral Research Associate in Forest Resilience, Climate Change, and Human Health in the Amazon
Change Institute, School of Geography and the Environment, University of Oxford. The post holder will have responsibility for developing research on the ecology, climate change and remote sensing
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is fixed term for up to 36 months with a start date on or before 1st October 2025. This post will involve developing analysis and control methods for systems described by PDEs, with applications in
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Department of Medicine. Our overarching aim is to develop better prognostic biomarkers to identify patients at particularly high risk of progression from MDS to sAML. We will build on the “liquid biopsy
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will test hypotheses and analyse scientific data from a variety of sources, reviewing and refining working hypotheses as appropriate, develop ideas for generating research income, and present detailed
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of independently managing a discrete area of a research project and experience of actively collaborating in the development of research articles for publication are desirable, but not essential. The post is fixed
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administrative tasks, this will include small scale project management to coordinate multiple aspects of work to meet deadlines. You will adapt existing and develop new scientific techniques and experimental
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signalling in DNA damage and/or immunity responses. The post-holder will be responsible for managing own academic research, adapting existing and developing new scientific techniques and experimental protocols
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research aims to develop new AI for shared human-AI decision-making in healthcare imaging. This post is focused on AI-assisted ultrasound guidance building on the group’s prior work on video and multi
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holder will use existing thermal remote sensing data, along with newly developed thermal models, to constrain the variability of Europa’s surface temperatures, properties and activity properties ahead
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of extreme events. New modelling capability will be developed to quantify impacts of extreme events on surface melt of ice shelves. These advances will bring a step change over current knowledge of extremes in