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The University of Bristol is seeking a Research Associate to work with Dr Ben Faber on a Wellcome Trust-funded project entitled ‘Utilising large joint structural phenotypes of osteoarthritis for enhanced disease prediction and novel treatment target discovery.’ The primary aim is to leverage...
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quantification. The interrelation of these three topic areas is increasingly important for future lightweight and sustainable composite structures. The ideal PhD candidate will enjoy working on finite-element
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team, you will lead on workforce planning and provide analysis and interpretation of HR management information. You will also take responsibility for managing organisational reviews and supporting
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Please note this role is primarily based within the School of Anatomy (BS2 8EJ), with elements taking place at the Langford Campus (BS40 5DU). Bristol Veterinary School is recruiting a full-time
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We are seeking to fill a number of postdoctoral research associate positions aligned with a Prosperity Partnership project involving AstraZeneca and Labman: drEAMcat - Earth-Abundant Metal Catalysis
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, computational statistics, inverse problems, numerical analysis, probability, statistical machine learning, stochastic analysis, and uncertainty quantification. You can demonstrate the ability to develop new
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, and analysis. Specifically, the project will employ a multidisciplinary approach combining molecular dynamics, coarse-grained simulations, and continuum structural mechanics with structural and dynamic
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available: Coding and data analysis can be carried out from home; experiments need to be performed on campus. As part of the role, you will (1) record and process high‑resolution video of nest construction by
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them by electron micro-probe methods, before in situ Rb-Sr and Pb isotope ratio analysis. This work will be undertaken on a number of suites of samples across continental history. In tandem, titanites
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analysis), Professor Martin (cancer epidemiology), Professor Jenny Donovan (social medicine, prostate cancer health services research) and Professor Kate Tilling (causal analysis). Part-time will be