48 distributed-computing-associate-professor PhD positions at University of East Anglia
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tests) and patient reported measures. Professors Guy Leschziner (neurology) and David D’Cruz (rheumatology) will be clinician advisors on this project. The student will also help co-ordinate
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, threatening global food security. We will identify the genetic and epigenetic changes associated with prolonged sub-culture of the blast fungus using comparative genome analysis and thereby define
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to regulate lipid metabolism in hepatocytes and its impairment contributes to fatty liver. Importantly, the role of alternative cellular mechanisms of intracellular cargo degradation like LC3-associated
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Primary supervisor - Dr Rebecca Taylor This project is recruiting to a 1st February 2026 start date. Ageing is associated with increased rates of disease, including neurodegenerative conditions
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across different imaging devices, including future sensors with unknown spectral sensitivities. Training The student will be based at the Colour & Imaging Lab at the School of Computing Sciences which has
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both laboratory (sequencing, qPCR, phage biology) and computational/analytical areas (bacterial and phage phylogenomics, genome-wide associations). During the PhD programme the student will spend time at
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activated to protect against cold temperatures, where the associated calorie turnover can help maintain metabolic health. Though proton leak occurs in mitochondria from all tissues and has a major influence
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additional cohorts. The project is a collaboration between the Quadram Institute (QIB), Earlham Institute (EI) and Imperial College. If you are interested in metagenomics, understanding the disease association
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observations and modelling of the physics and biogeochemistry of Antarctic shelf seas. You will gain experience in computer coding, statistics for environmental science, working with and piloting autonomous
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Project Supervisor - Professor Robert Field Glycoprotein biopharmaceuticals are increasingly important due to their ability to treat diseases where small molecule drugs do not prove effective