73 postdoctoral-image-processing-in-computer-science-"U" Fellowship positions at University of Nottingham in United Kingdom
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flow in hybrid systems: improving the simulation of engineering structures”. As part of the project - jointly undertaken by the University of Nottingham and the University of Salford -, we offer a
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difficult-to-cut materials), and in-process sensing and monitoring technologies. About you - Experimental Design & Planning; Implementation of Gage R&R Study; Expansion of Inspection technology to other
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process. Discover our benefits, visit Your Benefits website. We welcome applications from UK, Europe and worldwide and aim to make your move to the UK as smooth as possible. Visit the Moving to Nottingham
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/Fellow who can deliver the research whilst helping to manage project delivery. Candidates must hold an appropriate social science degree level qualification and a PhD (or be about to obtain a PhD, which
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, genes, and pathways involved in sensing water in the model plant Arabidopsis. Building on our previous work (Mehra et al., Science, 2022), we aim to understand how hormone-driven pathways help roots
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Applications are invited for an enthusiastic and motivated Post-Doctoral Research Associate/Fellow to join the laboratory of Professor Alan McIntyre within the Centre for Cancer Sciences based in
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Candidate Guidance to provide support on the application and interview process. Discover our benefits, visit Your Benefits website. We welcome applications from UK, Europe and worldwide and aim to make your
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oxygen-sensing in plants though the N-degron pathway of targeted proteolysis (eg. Gibbs et al Nature 2011, Abbas et al Current Biology 2015, Abbas et al Nature 2022). Applicants must have, or expect
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the development of chemical strategies for mitigating degradative interfacial process that limit cell performance. We encourage applicants with a range of skill sets to apply. The post is available
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discoveries (Mehra et al., Science, 2022), this project aims to identify novel genes and regulatory pathways involved in sensing water availability in the model plant Arabidopsis thaliana. We are particularly