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The Centre for Doctoral Training in Nanoscience and Nanotechnology (NanoDTC) at the University of Cambridge invites applications for its 3.5-year interdisciplinary PhD programme. The programme
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researchers at the CCGE, Oregon Health & Science University (OHSU), and the German Cancer Research Centre (DKFZ). This research is part of a Cancer Research UK International Alliance for Cancer Early Detection
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located in Central Cambridge, Cambridgeshire, UK. The key research and scholarship responsibilities and duties of this role are: Plan and manage research activities. Support an investigation into carbon
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cancer early detection research. The postholder will work closely with researchers from the University of Cambridge, Oregon Health & Science University, the University of Manchester, the German Cancer
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stipend at the UKRI rate (£20,780 in 2025-26 for full time students), and a contribution towards research and training costs; A personalised training programme, to develop research, communication
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and Technology (CST) at the University of Cambridge. The goal of this PhD programme is to launch one "deceptive by design" project that combines the perspectives of human-computer interaction (HCI) and
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to the launch of the Bloomberg Cambridge University Corporate Bond Index later in 2025 and the delivery of the ongoing research programme related to the index project. The successful candidate will undertake desk
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considered. Qualifications/Skills PhD degree in a programme relevant to human-computer interaction and/or critical computing, ideally in Computer Science, Industrial Engineering, Interaction Design, or a
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Starting Date 1 Jan 2026 Is the job funded through the EU Research Framework Programme? Horizon Europe - MSCA Marie Curie Grant Agreement Number 101227453 Is the Job related to staff position within a
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cancer is dynamic and dependent on ASCL1. Nat Cancer. 2024 Nov;5(11):1641-1659 https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/39394434/ ASCL1 activates neuronal stem cell-like lineage programming through remodeling