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in the Department of Chemistry, University of Oxford, for a period of up to 3 years. The project involves the development of methods to use light to regulate transport of amino acids and to engineer
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developing characterisations of network models and interactions with methods in statistical machine learning. The post holder provides guidance to junior members of the research group including project
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the tree of life. The main responsibilities will be to identify ancient gene families that encode membrane proteins and then use a range of phylogenomic methods to understand their ancestry. These analyses
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in Mass Spectrometry and Structural Glycobiology to work under the supervision of Prof. Weston Struwe for a period of 24 months. The project, funded by the UKRI, centres on developing advanced methods
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. They must work as part of a team, be willing to learn new methods and skills and persevere in case of discouraging results. The role will also include protocol development. The postholder is expected to be
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the DR Amiya Bhatia. This role includes research assistant work such as handling and analysis of quantitative and mixed-methods data from pre-post and retrospective surveys, development of study
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with an international reputation for excellence. The Department has a substantial research programme, with major funding from Medical Research Council (MRC), Wellcome Trust and National Institute
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, geospatial and computational methods. Informal enquiries may be addressed to Gemma Watson (email: gemma.watson@eng.ox.ac.uk) For more information about working at the Department, see www.eng.ox.ac.uk/about
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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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on single-agent settings. We are seeking a highly motivated postdoc to conduct research into this fast-moving area. Directions may include investigating quality evaluation methods for multi-agent systems