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, funded by the Medical Research Council and is due to start no earlier than January 2026. If successful, you will use experimental approaches to contribute to a project that is investigating aspects
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of Professor Colin Akerman in the Department of Pharmacology. This is a fixed-term post, for six months, funded by the Medical Research Council and is due to start no earlier than January 2026. If successful
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The University of Oxford is seeking a highly motivated Postdoctoral Scientist with expertise in biostatistics, machine learning, and cardiac magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to join Professor Betty
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: 1089, bioRxiv (2025)) by carrying out protein biochemical, cell biological, and live cell fluorescence imaging experiments. Associated structural analysis of the proteins by cryo-electron microscopy will
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spatially-resolved models of metastatic outgrowth in the liver which account for interactions between stromal, immune and tumour cells. You will analyse quantitative imaging data from a variety of sources
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at barrier surfaces. The work will combine advanced flow cytometry, immunohistochemistry, functional antimicrobial assays, confocal imaging and molecular techniques, alongside state-of-the-art imaging
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biophysics, and cutting-edge analytical technologies. Your expertise in optical microscopy, single molecule imaging, computational imaging and data analysis will help us further develop mass photometry 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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biological questions about how cytoskeletal proteins are used by disease-relevant organisms. We have access to excellent facilities such as the Central Oxford Structural and Molecular Imaging centre (COSMIC
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it relates to the laser process parameters. Specifically, you will carry out high resolution Raman imaging on laser written polymer networks with liquid crystal resins. Additionally, you will develop