170 phd-in-architecture-interior-design-built-environment Postdoctoral positions at University of Oxford
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and systemic immune environments to evade immune surveillance and will develop translatable therapeutic strategies to restore and enhance anti-cancer immunity. You will manage your own academic research
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to have significant academic and policy impact, and high visibility. The post offers an exceptional environment for academic growth, interdisciplinary collaboration, and meaningful engagement with one
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validate new technologies for the diagnosis, prevention, and management of sport injuries, with emphasis on safety rather than performance. You will be responsible for the design, execution and analysis
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science, who are excited about testing conceptual biological questions in vivo, and who thrive in professional and high-pressure environments where scientific curiosity and focus drive excellence. You will
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and structural biology of rhomboid-like membrane proteins. You should hold a PhD/DPhil in a topic relevant to structural biology and biochemistry, together with relevant experience. You should be able
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the project will focus on developing a thermal water splitting process based on complex transition metal oxides, and then studying the kinetics of the process to facilitate the design of a reactor to integrate
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project will involve both remote-sensing and field-based observations and data collection. It will provide outputs to the World Bank CAWEP (Central Asia Water Energy Power) programme to aid the design
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to implantation, including validating methods in virtual in vivo environments. • Collaborate with engineers to refine fuel cell specifications and support in vivo experiments. You should hold a relevant PhD
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and analysis of probabilistic and social choice models, help with the design and conduct of experiments, perform literature reviews, and contribute to the drafting of technical reports and publications
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focus on ambitious, ‘blue sky’ research for novel methods development relevant for drug discovery analysis pipelines, trial design and operational efficiency. Led by Professor Chris Holmes, and with