32 parallel-computing-numerical-methods-"Simons-Foundation" Fellowship positions at Nature Careers in United Kingdom
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will develop and apply methods to transform omics data into networks and executable models, collaborating closely with experts across the Petsalaki and Sheriff groups, Open Targets, EMBL-EBI, and the
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, multidisciplinary facilities for studying cellular and animal disease models. It also maintains numerous collaborative research links across the UCL Queen Square Institute of Neurology, UCL, the UK, and
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(summarising progress, methods and findings) to report at Advisory Board meetings and act upon guidance and recommendations from the Advisory Board. Apply knowledge in a way which develops new intellectual
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and strong relationship-building skills. Ability to apply and/or develop and devise successful models, techniques and methods in research and innovation. Extensive experience and achievement in
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and innovation (R&I) ecosystem. This is a unique opportunity to establish or expand your research programme in the UK, collaborate with world-class researchers, and contribute to national and global
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the application process, please contact Biosciences staffing at . About you You must have a PhD (or be studying towards it) in Medical Physics or Bioengineering, Computational Neuroscience, Applied
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recently funded 5-year programme of antifungal drug discovery at the MRC Centre for Medical Mycology. This exciting new programme connects MRC CMM researchers with drug discovery experts and scientists from
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-cell genomics/computer science (AI), neuroscience, vascular biology, developmental biology, cancer biology, immunology, biology/biomedicine, pharmacy, biomedical engineering, or related fields with ample
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to formulate and lead a research programme that will deliver innovative, world-class science in molecular host-microbes interactions or a related field and good knowledge of JIC/NRP research fields, underpinning
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post has arisen to work for 2 years (in the first instance) on a Programme grant joint between UCL, Insititute of Child Health and University of Newcastle entitled INSTINCT-MBINSTINCT MB. The work in the