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. About you It is desirable that you have a PhD in a relevant discipline, such as Statistics, Epidemiology, Mathematics or other relevant discipline. However, if you have relevant experience but no PhD
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Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) poses a growing global health threat, with projections estimating up to 10 million deaths annually from drug-resistant infections by 2050. AMR genes can move between humans, animals, and the environment, yet we lack a full understanding of how resistance spreads...
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We are currently inviting applications for a Postdoctoral Research Associate to work with Professor Lida Kanari at the Mathematical Institute, University of Oxford. This is a 1-year, fixed-term
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We are seeking a talented postdoctoral researcher to take up an exciting Fellowship opportunity at the Mathematical Institute. The prestigious Hooke Research Fellowships provide an ideal opportunity
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We invite applications for a Postdoctoral Research Associate in Operator Algebras to work with Professor Stuart White at the Mathematical Institute, University of Oxford. The position is full time
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the Pandemic Sciences Institute. We are looking for a postdoctoral researcher with strong mathematical and statistical skills to complement the existing genomics expertise in the group. The position is available
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medicine, with a primary focus on optimizing clinical trial design. The partnership will bring together the University of Oxford’s expertise in statistics, mathematics, engineering and AI with industry
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Colorectal Cancer - Stratification of Therapies through Adaptive Responses (CRC-STARS) programme, developing and applying cutting-edge mathematical methods to spatial transcriptomics imaging data in order to
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medicine, with a primary focus on optimizing clinical trial design. The partnership will bring together the University of Oxford’s expertise in statistics, mathematics, engineering and AI with industry
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We are currently inviting applications for a Postdoctoral Research Associate to work with Professors Jon Keating and Louis-Pierre Arguin at the Mathematical Institute, University of Oxford. This is