Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Listed
-
Category
-
Employer
-
Field
-
manufacturing using single cell omicsSupervisors: Colin Clarke and Niall BarronAbout the project: The study of cellular biology has been transformed by single cell analysis. Rapid technological advances in areas
-
this project, using extensive primary cell culture, molecular analysis, scRNAseq, non-invasive imaging analysis, along with mechanistic studies using 2D/3D culture models, we will dissect the distinct cellular
-
proposes the first complete critical edition, translation, and commentary for a corpus of medieval Latin texts, preserved in manuscripts in Brussels, Dublin, Oxford, Paris, and Rouen, concerning a towering
-
for structural variants and copy number variants (SVs/CNVs), will be used to optimize data analysis and variant discovery. The project will focus on identifying previously overlooked pathogenic variants, exploring
-
-centered and psychologically informed methods that could encourage responsible behaviours. Designing such approaches for opaque generative models, such as Large Language Models (LLMs), is critical and is
-
. Initial research has shown that the placement of network functions, along with their scaling up and down, plays a critical role in overall energy efficiency. However, there is a significant gap in real
-
to the wider world like the nomadic, semi-settled and settled tribes living in cultivable, desert, and mountainous ecologies. The project proposes an ambitious longitudinal enquiry, combining an analysis
-
Women's Tech Entrepreneurship - A Mixed-Methods Analysis of Ireland's Innovation Ecosystem Supervisory Team: Dr Marie Ryan, Dr Huanhuan Xiong, Prof. Eleanor Doyle Impact of technology on economic and non
-
understood, and the identification of targets of early intervention presents a great challenge. To address this critical knowledge gap, PREVENT, a large-scale population study carried out by Trinity College
-
the nomadic, semi-settled and settled tribes living in cultivable, desert, and mountainous ecologies. The project proposes an ambitious longitudinal enquiry, combining an analysis of digitized and published