17 web-developer-university-of-liverpool Fellowship research jobs at KINGS COLLEGE LONDON in United Kingdom
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bioinformaticians at all stages of the analysis project workflow Desirable criteria Excellent computational skills applied to HPC, big data, software development and web technologies Experience in teaching
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bringing together leading experts in brain development. We believe it is essential to investigate the determinants of normal development and we bring together expertise in basic animal models, the latest
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& Medicine at King’s College London. Reporting to the Director of the HAB and working in close partnership with the Spatial Biology Facility, you will lead the development and optimisation of high-resolution
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the Spatial Biology Facility, you will lead the development and optimisation of high-resolution spatial biology and multi-omics data analysis pipelines. Your primary focus (80% of your time) will be on leading
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This exciting research role will be responsible for the successful delivery and future development of a newepilepsy research project jointly run by King’s College London and Swansea University and funded by
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: interoceptive mechanisms of anxiety after cancer’. The award is supporting a large-scale collaborative research programme between KCL, UCL, Stanford University, and the National Cancer Institute (NIH) through
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for this role. This role will involve developing and applying analysis plans using a variety of advanced methods with the support of project supervisors. The postholder will have completed a PhD in a relevant
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the Spatial Biology Facility, you will lead the development and optimisation of high-resolution spatial biology and multi-omics data analysis pipelines. Your primary focus (80% of your time) will be on leading
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, as well as develop methodological research to further advance the sciences of improvement and implementation and thus achieve better patient experience and outcomes of care more rapidly within the NHS
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participant recruitment for advanced magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) (fetal imaging), a sub-study of the PISA (Prenatal Influences on the Development of Infant Autoimmunity) project funded by The Leona M. and