Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Listed
-
Category
-
Program
-
Field
-
We invite applications for a fully funded PhD studentship at UK home rates to join a Leverhulme Trust-funded project investigating how a novel mass spectrometry imaging technique, cryo-OrbiSIMS
-
undergoing weight loss, as well as knee cartilage thickness and strain using MRI, inflammatory biomarkers, and the synovial fluid microenvironment in a subgroup of individuals. It will utilise advanced imaging
-
humans, providing a unique opportunity to work with cutting-edge neurophysiological and imaging techniques. The study will examine age-related differences in motor unit behaviour across multiple muscles
-
how ageing affects motor unit structure and function in humans, providing a unique opportunity to work with cutting-edge neurophysiological and imaging techniques. The study will examine age-related
-
An exciting opportunity has arisen for a research assistant in the Sir Peter Mansfield Imaging Centre (SPMIC) and Mental Health and Clinical Neurosciences, School of Medicine at the University
-
, inflammatory biomarkers, and the synovial fluid microenvironment in a subgroup of individuals. It will utilise advanced imaging techniques, metabolic assessment, and proteomic analysis. By studying both
-
and industry coordination. The postdoc will contribute to empirical research, scholarly publications, and the design of human-AI collaboration models. Work will be based at the University of Nottingham
-
This is an exciting opportunity to join the Magnetic Resonance & Precision Imaging team at the Nottingham NIHR Biomedical Research Centre (NBRC MR&PI) as a Clinical Research Practitioner. Precision
-
motivated postdoctoral Research Fellow to join our interdisciplinary project on how cryogenic OrbiSIMS, a cutting-edge mass spectrometry imaging technique, interacts with complex biomolecular structures. You
-
of imaging, and bio sample collection, processing and storage. Coordinate patient and public involvement activities relevant to the HEATMAP project. Collaborate with clinical colleagues in the Early