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PhD Studentship - EASTBIO - The Impact of Diet-microbiome-immune Interactions on Intestinal Function
play critical physiological and pathological roles in both health and disease, for example, by mediating bone development, regulating immune cell function, and driving inflammatory responses such as
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A fully funded four-year PhD position is available to work on the project titled “Fault-Tolerant Architectures for Superconducting Qubit Quantum Computers”. This position is a collaborative
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neurotransmitter that is released by our sympathetic nervous system. Our previous investigations has shown stroke leads to excessive output of noradrenaline leading to lymphocyte death and dysregulated function
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) (doi.org/10.1182/blood-2022-170882 ), as well as an increase in multipotent stem cell numbers, however the function of these stem cells appears to be defective. Importantly, these observed changes
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resources by being designed as dual-purpose elements targeting geothermal heat exchange and structural support for buildings. Yet, their wider use has been hindered by the lack of (i) sustainable expertise
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. These “artificially aged” oocytes reveal key ageing features. We will use this as an additional model to monitor the temporospatial changes during oocyte ageing which will allow us to generate data for a standard curve
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work is linking microscopic (discrete) mechanics to macroscopic (continuum) models of active slender systems. The project involves three main components: Theoretical continuum modelling. Extend classical
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Deadline: 30 September 2025 A fully funded 3.5 year PhD position is available to work on the project titled “Scalable benchmarking for digital quantum computers based on blind testing
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-value reinforcements in their short and randomly aligned form. A key challenge to the effective reintegration of recycled carbon and glass fibres into high-performance products lies in achieving scalable
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One fully funded, full-time PhD position to work with Alessandro Suglia in the Embodied, Situated, and Grounded Intelligence (ESGI) group at the School of Informatics, University of Edinburgh