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and Technology (CST) at the University of Cambridge. The goal of this PhD programme is to launch one "deceptive by design" project that combines the perspectives of human-computer interaction (HCI) and
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) advances in imaging techniques that fuel a more detailed understanding of the brain, 2) tools from artificial intelligence that enable building better computer simulations of the brain. The lab will leverage
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Discovery Centre at Cambridge. The student will be working on a collaborative project jointly supervised by Prof David Spring (Cambridge) and Dr Jonathan Bargh (AstraZeneca) and will have the opportunity
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, when microbiome colonisation begins. You will collect faecal samples from birds with natural and experimentally altered gut microbiomes, longitudinally monitor growth, behaviour and cognition (via
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building blocks to elicit properties far beyond simple averaging over the component materials involved, instead giving exciting opportunities for new functionalities that are not found in natural materials
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to elucidate their role, their interactions with proteins and explore small molecule-based intervention strategies for cancer [e.g. see Genome Biology, 2025, 25, 155; Nature Chemistry, 2025, 17, 875; PNAS, 2024
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formation, dynamics and functions of four-stranded DNA G-quadruplex structures and modified DNA bases in the genome (e.g. see Genome Biology, 2025 25, 155; Nature Chemistry, 2025, 17, 875; PNAS, 2024, 12(7
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screens. Nature Reviews Molecular and Cell Biology 2023. 24, 477-494. Awwad, S.W., Doyle, C., Coulthard, J., Bader, A.S., Gueorguieva, N., Lam, S., Gupta, V., Belotserkovskaya, R., Tran, T-A
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conserved mechanism to suppress endogenous retroviruses across the Drosophila genus. Nature Communications. Alizada A, et al. (2024). Transcriptional regulation of the piRNA pathway by Ovo in animal ovarian
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for scalable, data-rich design and operation frameworks within diverse building contexts. For project-specific enquiries please e-mail Prof. Dongfang Liang, dl359@cam.ac.uk . For general enquiries, please email