160 phd-position-in-microfluidics-and-biosensors Postdoctoral positions at University of Oxford in Uk
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amino acids and growth factors. You will hold a PhD/D.Phil. or be near completion* in microbiology, molecular biology, cell biology or closely related area together with relevant experience and have
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hold, or be close to completion of, a relevant PhD/DPhil in one of the following subjects: computational genomics, genetic or molecular epidemiology, medical statistics or statistical genetics. You must
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under the lead of Professor Georg Holländer conducts research on the molecular and cellular control of thymus development and function. This position is offered full-time on a fixed-term contract
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We have a new and exciting Postdoctoral Research Assistant position available within the CRC-STARS spatial biology team, analysing and interpreting spatial transcriptomic data. You will work on the
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and how it may respond to vaccination. You will supervise master’s and PhD students, and support the overall efforts of the lab. This post offers the opportunity to engage in cutting-edge translational
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via independent study and training courses. It is essential that you hold a PhD/DPhil (or close to completion) in mathematics, computational biology, physics or a related discipline, and have experience
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to secure future computing systems at lower costs and performance overheads. About you You should possess a PhD/DPhil in Engineering, Computer Science or other related field, (with the possibility
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Oxford’s Department of Orthopaedics (NDORMS) as well as collaborators in Bristol and Cardiff. You should have a PhD/DPhil (or be near completion) in robotics, computer vision, machine learning or a closely
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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
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cancer progression, immune evasion, and therapeutic resistance. We place a strong emphasis on the use of spatial biological approaches applied to human tumour models including organ/tumour perfusion, slice