176 maynooth-university-programmable-city-project Postdoctoral positions at University of Oxford
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, University of Oxford to study the interplay of ADP-ribosylation and ubiquitylation signalling in regulation of immunity and genome stability. The post-holder will be responsible for managing own academic
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-lab and supervised by Jasmina Kapetanovic, https://www.ndcn.ox.ac.uk/team/jasmina-kapetanovic a Principal Investigator and Group Lead at the University of Oxford and Consultant Vitreoretinal Surgeon
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enhancing the clinical relevance of experimental findings and supporting the development of novel therapies. You will be responsible for planning, managing and conducting the academic research project and
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becomes essential. This project will focus on building a comprehensive digital twin of a future quantum computer to investigate how classical subsystems scale and interact, and how this scaling impacts
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project ‘Growing Grammar’. What We Offer As an employer, we genuinely care about our employees’ wellbeing and this is reflected in the range of benefits that we offer including: • An excellent
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research projects require a creative, multidisciplinary approach, and as such provide opportunities across parasitology, structural biology, biochemistry and cell biology including single molecule
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discoveries on the electrosolvation force. The project will use a range of optical methods to examine the interactions in colloidal and molecular systems and relate the experimental findings to theories
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full-time fixed-term appointment for 3 years. We are seeking a Postdoctoral Research Assistant to join the research group of Professor Tal Arnon at the Kennedy Institute in Oxford for an exciting project
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University weighting We are excited to offer this fixed-term Research Assistant position at the University of Oxford, under the supervision of Professor Nobuko Yoshida. The Research Assistant will be part of
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to serve as components of such a vaccine, as well as to assist eventually with the design of the vaccine itself and liaise with appropriate partners to conduct clinical trials. The University of Oxford is