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A competition-funded PhD studentship is available in the School of Chemistry at the University of Birmingham to develop and apply nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy and imaging to advance
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-inflammation and psychiatric disorders (e.g. depression). The cellular processes underlying structural brain change include neurogenesis and gliogenesis, cell loss, changes in cell shape, synapse formation and
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, cooperative operation among connected electrified vehicles such as airport trailers, delivery pods, or urban mobility fleets. Using multi-agent systems, reinforcement learning, and digital-twin technologies
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Atmospheric rivers are narrow bands of strong vertically integrated water vapour transport (IVT), conjuring the image of a river in the sky. This phenomenon has been studied extensively in relation
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-inflammation and psychiatric disorders (e.g. depression). The cellular processes underlying structural brain change include neurogenesis and gliogenesis, cell loss, changes in cell shape, synapse formation and
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mechanisms, namely the remodelling of membrane lipids. Lipid remodelling is a process whereby bacteria selectively modify their membrane lipid composition in response to a particular environmental stimulus
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plastic use by nesting birds globally using image archives such as YouTube, Google Images etc. and relate it to land-use (e.g. urbanisation), pollution etc. For further information on this project and
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editing), transcriptomics, laser scanning confocal microscopy, computational imaging approaches for analysis of images and movies, stimulating neuronal function with opto- and thermo-genetics in vivo, and
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-disciplinary PhD project aims to provide a clear picture of the landscape of battery manufacturing, waste and end-of-life processing. The project aims are to: Identify waste streams and energy requirements
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integrating multi-modal data (e.g., time series, geospatial data, text, and image - including both hydrological and human-related data) and capturing complex, non-linear relationships (Bommasani et al., 2021