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-contractual basis) that combines a mix of remote and regular on-campus working. Your skills and attributes for success: A PhD in Statistics, Data Science, or Epidemiology with experience in causal inference
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at the University of Edinburgh. It is part of a BBSRC-funded grant (“Methylation Ageing by Lifestyle and Tissue biosample – MALT”) into omics and healthy ageing. The research project will utilise DNA methylation data
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Deadline: Monday 15th December, 2025. Competition funded PhD Project. Supervisors: Dr Laura McCulloch (The University of Edinburgh), Dr Joy Edwards-Hicks (The University of Edinburgh) About the
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Full time: 35hrs per week Fixed Term: Available from 1 March 2026 – 31 August 2028 The Opportunity: The Centre for Medical Informatics at the Usher Institute within The University of Edinburgh is
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at the University of Edinburgh. It is part of a BBSRC-funded grant (“Methylation Ageing by Lifestyle and Tissue biosample – MALT”) into omics and healthy ageing. The research project will utilise DNA methylation data
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University, Edinburgh, is seeking to enhance and expand its strengths in research and teaching by appointing an Assistant Professor in Statistical Data Science, or related area. This is an open-ended position
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studying children born preterm and term comparators. We are collecting multiscale data during the neonatal period and at ages 5 and 7 years. The post-holder will apply statistical and computational
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-focused PDRA position, will be based at the University of Manchester, but co-supervised by lead researchers at both the University of Manchester (Professor Catherine Powell) and the University Edinburgh (Dr
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Research (NIHR) BioResource . It is led by researchers at King’s College London, in collaboration with researchers at Ulster University, University of Edinburgh, and Cardiff University. GLAD was launched in
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; led by University of Edinburgh and involving University College London (UCL), Imperial College, Kings College London, and University of Exeter; is a £12M investment in the development of new theory and