Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Employer
-
Field
-
pancreatic cancer are being investigated as suggested by the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence. Whether different diagnostic and imaging approaches could lead to improved survival and if
-
instruments and use them together with graduate students and postdocs to acquire data on DNA replication and/or chromatin organization. An aptitude in instrumentation development and quantitative biophysics, a
-
molecular biology, quantitative imaging and biophysical approaches to investigate cell shape changes in cultured cells and in vivo. Current projects in the lab include investigating the regulation
-
to Postdocs, Research Assistants, Research and Teaching Technicians, Teaching Fellows and AEP equivalent up to and including grade 7. Visit the Centre for Research Staff Development for more information. About
-
techniques, data analysis with desirable knowledge of material characterisation, rheology and imaging. Scientific interest, dedication to research and career goal to work in physical science research
-
. cell culture, molecular biology, imaging, cell signalling assays). As well as performing experiments on the project, the role will involve providing training in techniques to relevant staff/students
-
analyse large, multidimensional 4D STEM datasets. Develop or adapt software tools (e.g. Python, MATLAB) for image reconstruction, phase mapping, and quantitative analysis of ferroelectric domain wall
-
Overview This research assistant post will enable the candidate to undertake a PhD on the diagnosis of pancreatic cancer, specifically focusing on examining the use of imaging before a diagnosis is
-
vivo imaging, histology, western and ELISA. You will also be required to be available when organs become available. Significant practical experience in NMP and knowledge of in vivo modelling would be a
-
, including immunocytochemistry, Western blotting, and qPCR, alongside the application of microscopic imaging techniques. Responsibilities also include data collection, analysis, and presentation, as