Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
to understanding the origins and progression of paediatric brain tumours and developing new therapeutic strategies. The lab combines genetic engineering, molecular biology, and translational research to investigate
-
communities, such as the human gut microbiome. This role will use a combination of microbiological, genetic and analytical techniques to isolate and engineer bacteria for use as next-generation probiotics
-
. This role offers a rare opportunity to contribute to cancer interception science at the frontier of personalised prevention, with strong translational potential. We are seeking a talented and motivated
-
deployments. The Prorok Lab in the Dept. of Computer Science & Technology, has a variety of robotic platforms (aerial and ground), and boasts expertise in controlling and deploying them in practice, as
-
efficient DNA repair, and particularly, how this impacts mutagenesis. The postholder will assist with a variety of molecular biology experiments to identify and characterise DNA damage response mechanisms
-
them to do so promptly. Please quote reference LE46560 on your application and in any correspondence about this vacancy. The University actively supports equality, diversity and inclusion and encourages
-
pipelines will include structural imaging, multi-shell diffusion, susceptibility weighted imaging and functional MRI. These analyses will make use of publicly available tools, and may also require software
-
in Cambridge. The mission statement of the group is "developing statistical methods to use genetic variation to answer clinically important questions about disease aetiology and prevention". The three
-
networks. This position is part of a UK-Canada Quantum for Science collaborative project "Quantum network applications in theory and practice" funded by STFC/EPSRC (UK) and NSERC (Canada), led by Professor
-
of using FPGA tools and provide them the necessary training to use the ASIC tools. The team at Cambridge consists of three investigators: Prof. Robert Mullins (PI), Prof. Timothy Jones and Dr Rika Antonova