Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Listed
-
Category
-
Program
-
Field
-
Cancer) study, a Cancer Research UK–funded programme led from the University of Oxford. The project aims to uncover how the sequence of genetic mutations in colorectal cancer drives changes in stem cell
-
authorisations worldwide. If you are passionate about conducting high-impact research that drives meaningful change, we encourage you to apply. You will exploit a ground-breaking long-read sequencing metagenomic
-
accuracy across the volcanic arc. The post holder will also be encouraged to develop independent research directions aligned with their own interests to support career development and prepare for future
-
, bioinformatics, and data science. You will design and deliver statistical analyses using large-scale electronic health records and pathogen sequencing data to improve infection diagnosis, management, and
-
close to completing) a PhD in statistical genetics, computational biology, bioinformatics, or a related quantitative discipline, with proven expertise in the analysis of large-scale sequencing data and
-
time constraints in a complex environment with multiple deadlines and stakeholders. They will have the ability to stay calm under pressure, solve problems with maturity and common sense, and demonstrate
-
Applications are invited for the Glasstone Research Fellowship, tenable at the University of Oxford in the Department of Engineering Science and aligned with one of the research themes
-
natural language queries, model-internal debugging, interpretability-driven model control, and scalable evaluation of mechanistic explanations. The team collaborates with multiple academic and industry
-
recognises his pivotal role in work that led, among others, to the development of CAMPATH monoclonal antibodies, which are now used for the treatment of certain leukaemias and for multiple sclerosis
-
Colorectal Cancer) study, a Cancer Research UK–funded programme led from the University of Oxford. The project aims to uncover how the sequence of genetic mutations in colorectal cancer drives changes in stem