30 digital-image-processing-phd-scholarship Postdoctoral positions at University of London
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About the Role The combination of personalised biophysical models and deep learning techniques with a digital twin approach has the potential to generate new treatments for cardiac diseases. Our
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for Translational Bioinformatics is a team of computational biologists, software engineers and data scientists located within the Digital Environment Research Institute (https://www.qmul.ac.uk/deri/) at Queen Mary
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. Applicants should have a PhD in Cultural Geography, Environmental Arts or a closely related field; knowledge of current climate- and ocean-related scholarship in the Blue Humanities; a track record of
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on autofluorescence (AF) imaging and Raman spectroscopy for detection of metastatic lymph nodes during breast cancer surgery. Engaging with and reporting to Dr Alexey A. Koloydenko (Department of
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physiologically relevant models will provide crucial platforms to mimic disease pathology, and better understand and treat tendinopathy. The project will generate tendon-chips using in-house commercially available
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and taught postgraduate students and over 250 PhD students within our London operation, supported by an administrative and technical staff of around 50. About Queen Mary At Queen Mary University
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help supervise associated PhD students. The successful candidates will join large, supportive research teams led by Profs Knight, Screen and Connelly all working collaboratively at Queen Mary. This is an
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consent from patients undergoing surgery for use of their ‘waste’ surgical tissue, prior to surgery. Additional understanding and experience in maintaining all documentation needed under the relevant Human
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About the Role We are seeking to recruit an outstanding lab-based molecular biologist with or about to receive a PhD, who has experience in development and application of next-generation sequencing
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project is to develop a series of surrogate models focusing notably on Physics-Informed Neural Networks to emulate the process of sediment deposition, diagenesis, and potentially fracturing, working closely