26 computer-programmer-"IMPRS-ML"-"IMPRS-ML" PhD positions at University of East Anglia
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. The Norwich Research Park Biosciences Doctoral Training Programme (NRPDTP) is offering fully funded studentships for October 2026 entry. The programme offers postgraduates the opportunity to undertake a 4-year
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facilities, located at the core of the Norwich Research Park. The Norwich Research Park Biosciences Doctoral Training Programme (NRPDTP) is offering fully funded studentships for October 2026 entry
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@uea.ac.uk The Norwich Research Park Biosciences Doctoral Training Programme (NRPDTP) is offering fully funded studentships for October 2026 entry. The programme offers postgraduates the opportunity
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Research Park Biosciences Doctoral Training Programme (NRPDTP) is offering fully funded studentships for October 2026 entry. The programme offers postgraduates the opportunity to undertake a 4-year PhD
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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
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through The Lupus Trust. Training programme: Evidence synthesis, qualitative methods and analysis, mixed methods, statistical analysis potentially including meta-analysis, intensive longitudinal methods
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across different imaging devices, including future sensors with unknown spectral sensitivities. Training The student will be based at the Colour & Imaging Lab at the School of Computing Sciences which has
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sequencing and researching disease in patient cohorts, working with machine learning techniques and programming computers. The candidate will learn about different flavors of metagenomic sequencing, how
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decisions about personalised phage therapy. The expected workload is mainly computational, using bioinformatics analyses to investigate the microbiome and phageome with supporting laboratory work for DNA
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effects on the human host, either beneficially, such as antibacterial compounds, or negatively, such as toxins. Computational analysis of genomic data highlights a vast number of pathways to such molecules