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of the project is to 1) develop computational pipelines for image analysis and physical analysis of cell shape trajectories, and for combined morpho-molecular analysis of cell shape together with molecular markers
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, at the University of Cambridge, UK. The Research Assistant will work together with a team of students and research collaborators on the development of learning-based control policies that facilitate
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well as the wider academic community: for example, by collaborating or engaging with policy, charity, or stakeholder organisations; by developing or maintaining open-source and/or community resources and/or by
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position verification, entanglement on quantum networks and network capacity and noise mitigation. Duties include developing and conducting individual and collaborative research objectives, proposals and sub
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developing new catalytic activation modes that lead to new synthetic transformations. As synthetic chemists, we are uniquely placed to leverage expertise in small molecule catalytic systems to design reactions
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opportunity for an early career researcher to be develop their curatorial practice around British Art (1700-1950). The post holder will have the opportunity to build partnerships in the University of Cambridge
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a nano source to cater for various throughput and sensitivity requirements. The appointee will receive training in developing quantitative LC-MS methodologies for peptides and proteins, as
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and Primary Care and Medical Genetics. They will support and conduct analyses of complex datasets, involving both the development of novel analytical methods and the application of existing techniques
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. The postholder will develop, refine, and execute imaging analysis pipelines, both independently and in conjunction with other data, such as clinical outcomes, to establish meaningful relationships. Analysis
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://www.aria.org.uk/opportunity-spaces/nature-computes-better/scaling-compute/ The objective of our project, funded within this programme, is to develop a scalable and modular simulation framework. At the lowest level