53 postdoctoral-image-processing-in-computer-science PhD positions at University of East Anglia
Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
. genetics, molecular biology, evolutionary biology) or a quantitative science (e.g. computer science, statistics, physics), and have strong interests in genomics, data analysis and evolution. The Norwich
-
their host plant. Use cutting-edge molecular biology and genomics, we will try to solve a decades-old mystery in plant pathology. Many plant disease-causing fungi lose their ability to cause disease
-
), computation (bioinformatics, machine learning, statistical analysis), working with animals (radio-tracking, animal handling/sampling), and deep knowledge of evolutionary biology and gerontology. The Norwich
-
the laboratory of Dr. Phil Carella, located in the Department of Cell and Developmental Biology at the John Innes Centre. It provides an exciting opportunity to explore disease resistance in the emerging model
-
-of-the-art technics in cell biology, genetics, molecular biology and proteomic, this project aims at characterizing a novel signalling pathway modulating root nodule symbiosis. The insights gained from
-
project provides the unique opportunity for the successful candidate to receive broad training on cellular and molecular biology techniques. The project will be supervised by two molecular biologists
-
metagenomic datasets. This project provides an exciting opportunity to discover new bioactive molecules and develop skills across informatics, biology and chemistry. Applications are welcomed from students who
-
both laboratory (sequencing, qPCR, phage biology) and computational/analytical areas (bacterial and phage phylogenomics, genome-wide associations). During the PhD programme the student will spend time at
-
-dioxide from the atmosphere, and also emits nitrous-oxide and methane, important greenhouse-gases formed by marine ecosystems. We urgently need to understand the processes regulating these air-sea fluxes
-
or pathogenic? What impact does this have on the global climate? The recruited postgraduate researcher (PGR) will be pioneering research understanding this process in marine fungi and assessing the contribution