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Grade 6: £34,982 - £40,855 per annum Reporting to the Professor Linda Mulcahy, the postholder will provide research support involving the collection and analysis of data which will support the
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degree (or currently be enrolled in a master’s programme) in a relevant field, as well as experience with qualitative data analysis. You will possess strong academic writing, presentational, and critical
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approaches including targeted genetic murine models, primary cell culture and analysis, multi-omics and bioinformatics. The biological focus will be on vascular biology, immune cell function and metabolism
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science, with applications to public and veterinary health, therapeutic development, and pandemic preparedness. You will contribute to method development, data analysis, and collaborative projects, and will
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products (e.g. transcripts and proteins) and imaging analysis. The roles of relevant parasite genes and pathways are investigated using gene expression perturbation approaches, such as RNA interference and
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enthusiasm for quantitative methods, cognitive neuroscience and willingness to gain expertise in programming. You will have an understanding of basic principles underlying functional neuroimaging analysis and
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enthusiasm for quantitative methods, cognitive neuroscience and willingness to gain expertise in programming. You will have an understanding of basic principles underlying functional neuroimaging analysis and
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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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research programmes, specifically expertise in yeast cell culture, cell cycle analysis, molecular genetics, in vivo crosslinking, nanopore sequencing, and advanced microscopy (ScanR, Leica Thunder
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computational skills and aptitude for statistical analysis of climate data. The successful candidate will primarily conduct analyses of the meteorological impacts of climate change but gain opportunities to work