23 developer-"https:"-"https:"-"IMEDEA-CSIC-UIB" Postdoctoral positions at King's College London
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includes developing a novel approach for awake imaging, which may involve 8 weeks of training in the US. If you fulfil our essential criteria and are a dedicated researcher with enthusiasm for high-quality
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fundamental discovery to patient care. Our laboratory focuses on advanced label-free optical technologies for disease detection and characterisation. We develop fibre-optic and multimodal imaging systems
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time post (35 hours per week), and you will be offered a fixed term contract until 30/04/2029. Research staff at King’s are entitled to at least 10 days per year (pro-rata) for professional development
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of disease, therapeutic discovery, and patient-centred outcomes. Within SCPS, the Institute of Pharmaceutical Science (IPS) is organised into four Departments (Drug Discovery; Medicines Development; Medicines
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for you. We strongly encourage our staff to dedicate time to their professional development through training courses and participation in working groups and networks. We also encourage our staff to seek
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, organising and analysing data, supporting thematic and narrative analysis of legal judgments and statutory reports, contributing to the development of an interdisciplinary analytical framework, and assisting
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in these brains at various stages of development. The data will then need to be used to model mathematically the evolution of the gene regulatory network controlling forebrain patterning. The role
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includes developing a novel approach for awake imaging, which may involve 8 weeks of training in the US. If you fulfil our essential criteria and are a dedicated researcher with enthusiasm for high-quality
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(across high and ultra-low-field strengths), with high-risk and typically developing populations across HIC and LMIC settings. Demonstrated experience of implementing strategies for successful acquisition
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governing the formation of the brain during embryonic development and in early postnatal life. This is based on the understanding that early experience shapes the way our brain is constructed. While