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flexible and hard-working individual who is capable of maintaining attention to meticulous detail in a long-term image analysis process. Responsibilities will include identifying and managing practical
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motility apparatus through single molecule fluorescence imaging approaches. Underpinning genetic and biochemical experiments will also be required. The project will build on our recent work in this area
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). Experience in high content imaging and experience in working with cell cultures of neurons and glia would be desirable. Diversity Committed to equality and valuing diversity Application Process You will be
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collaborative programme bringing together a team of leading experts in advanced electron microscopy imaging, first-principles modelling, metal halide semiconductor thin-film and device fabrication, and
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used in our work centre around optical imaging and spectroscopy and nanofabrication. The work also relies on theory and simulation, specifically focusing on numerical mean-field electrostatics
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collaborative programme bringing together a team of leading experts in advanced electron microscopy imaging, first-principles modelling, metal halide semiconductor thin-film and device fabrication, and
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contributing to publications. Experience in high content imaging, immunohistochemistry, W-blot, PCR, bulk and/or single cell RNAseq and in generating and analysing ‘omics data would be desirable. Diversity
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will involve bulk and single-cell RNA-seq, ATAC-seq, DNA methylation profiling, and proteomics, integrated with high-content live-cell imaging datasets (SPOT/SAM analysis). You will develop pipelines
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. The research requires experience in high vacuum systems, laser, molecular beams and laser desorption sources, charged particle beams and optics, velocity-map imaging detection, and the associated data processing
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period of 12 months in the first instance, with potential to extend. The project involves advanced theory for new ultrafast imaging experiments and is funded by Engineering and Physical Sciences Research