Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Listed
-
Employer
- University of Oxford
- ;
- KINGS COLLEGE LONDON
- University of Cambridge
- University of London
- Durham University
- AALTO UNIVERSITY
- King's College London
- Heriot Watt University
- University of Liverpool
- DURHAM UNIVERSITY
- UNIVERSITY OF VIENNA
- University of Birmingham
- Nature Careers
- Royal College of Art
- ; King's College London
- Imperial College London
- Swansea University
- ; Royal Holloway, University of London
- ; Technical University of Denmark
- ; The University of Manchester
- ; University of Cambridge
- ; University of Copenhagen
- ; University of Dundee
- ; University of Exeter
- ; University of Kent
- ; University of Oxford
- ; University of Southern Denmark
- Aston University
- Birmingham City University
- Manchester Metropolitan University
- Medical Research Council
- Sheffield Hallam University
- University of Glasgow
- University of Hull
- University of Leicester
- University of Lincoln
- University of Manchester
- University of Reading
- University of West London
- 30 more »
- « less
-
Field
-
work with in vitro and in vivo models of genetic diseases would be advantageous. Please see the below 'Job Description' for further details on the role, responsibilities, and selection criteria, as
-
Claudia Monaco’s research group at the Kennedy Institute of Rheumatology. In this role, you will apply single cell biology and cell signalling techniques combined with in vivo and in vitro models
-
of the microbiome in olfaction using mouse models. The selected applicant will join the vibrant and friendly Tucker lab and work as part of a team interacting with the group of Prof Mike Curtis. The postdoc will
-
structural development over time at the group, sub-group, and individual level (e.g., using normative modelling and clustering approaches to parse heterogeneity). The candidates will further have the
-
, to support the development of murine infection models for antifungal efficacy testing as well as for use in in vitro screens. Secondly, to contribute to the development, optimisation and implementation
-
migration and in vivo murine models of inflammation and technical expertise in complex flow cytometry is essential. The previous ability to work with rodents would be advantageous, whilst experience in
-
also highly valuable. The successful candidate will be expected to work on estimating dynamic models of medical spending and savings and is expected to publish in high-impact academic journals, and to
-
level of detail extracted from these experiments. As part of this role, you will work closely with other researchers to translate these experimental results into our numerical models, helping to improve
-
on evaluating the abilities of large language models (LLMs) of replicating results from the arXiv.org repository across computational sciences and engineering. You should have a PhD/DPhil (or be near completion
-
of the microbiome in olfaction using mouse models. The selected applicant will join the vibrant and friendly Tucker lab and work as part of a team interacting with the group of Prof Mike Curtis. The postdoc will