Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Listed
-
Category
-
Employer
- ; University of East Anglia
- ;
- University of Cambridge
- ; The University of Manchester
- ; University of Birmingham
- ; University of Plymouth
- ; Newcastle University
- ; Oxford Brookes University
- ; University of Exeter
- ; University of Reading
- ; University of Southampton
- ; University of Sussex
- Swansea University
- University of Birmingham
- University of Nottingham
- 5 more »
- « less
-
Field
-
Primary supervisor – Dr Falk Hildebrand We are looking for a motivated and computationally interested student, to work on a bioinformatic project on cutting-edge metagenomics and clinical
-
practical field and laboratory expertise with fundamental science in microbial genomics, microbiology, and bioinformatic methods to address food industry and public health challenges while being supported by
-
meet the following criteria: Essential Qualifications: Applicants for PhD must have a first-class or upper second-class undergraduate degree (or equivalent) in Neuroscience, Biochemistry, Bioinformatics
-
both independently and as part of our dynamic research team. The Microbes, Microbiomes and Bioinformatics (MMB) Doctoral Training Partnership (DTP) is open to UK and international candidates with
-
between chromosome structure and conformation in the bacterium Acinetobacter baumannii, and how these impact upon antibiotic resistance and virulence. The Microbes, Microbiomes and Bioinformatics (MMB
-
though not necessary. Previous experience in modelling or computation is highly desirable. Additional knowledge or experience in Neuroscience, Air Quality, Public Health, Bioinformatics, Mental Health
-
transposable element biology. They should be able to develop and apply at scale bioinformatic tools that identify and classify transposable elements, and the variation they create. Solid experience in
-
CRISPR, bioinformatics and state-of-the-art bioimaging to analyze the impact of disease-related genetic variants in Drosophila. The goal is to create an efficient pipeline for rapid, higher-throughput
-
the University of Edinburgh and potentially other museums. We are looking for someone interested in conservation genomics, working with museum specimens and a desire to develop bioinformatics/data
-
in bioinformatics and genetics would also be considered. For genetics-focussed candidates, subject knowledge in obesity/metabolism is welcome, but not essential. For molecular biology candidates