-
research initiatives such as the Met Office Academic Partnership and Birmingham’s Turing University Network . The recently renovated Elm House, is a building fully dedicated to open, inclusive and inspiring
-
of seed gene networks”. This project aims to use reverse genetics, cross-species complementation and single cell next-generation sequencing approaches to investigate how the gene networks that regulate
-
annotation of these metabolomes using multistage fragmentation (MSⁿ) data, incorporating novel computational methods and strategies (e.g. spectral matching, network-based approaches, machine learning) where
-
expected to plan appropriately for their own future career development, which may include networking and submitting funding applications. This is a fixed term post of up to 20-months duration. Main Duties
-
Duties The responsibilities may include some but not all of the responsibilities outlined below. Implement and test different Artificial Neural Network (ANN) architectures, such as convolutional and
-
will develop and apply methods to transform omics data into networks and executable models, collaborating closely with experts across the Petsalaki and Sheriff groups, Open Targets, EMBL-EBI, and the
-
and deploy the most promising prototypes at multiple field sites around the world via our global collaborator network. An important part of the work will be publishing high quality research papers in
-
project managing research to deliver high quality results. Ability to communicate complex information clearly, to a wide audience. Strong report-writing and proposal-writing skills. Confidence in networking
-
dependents. Childcare support allowance. Annual leave purchase options. Crick Networks offering diverse groups’ support, community and inclusive social events. Perks: Discounted gym memberships, bike-to-work
-
into the plasticity of pluripotent stem cells and their underlying gene regulatory network. Applicants should be motivated by fundamental scientific curiosity with a particular interest in stem cells and cell fate