27 maynooth-university-programmable-city-project Postdoctoral positions at University of Cambridge
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evolution of a recently discovered family of clonally transmissible cancers which affect several species of marine bivalves. This new position is part of an ERC-funded project examining genome evolution in
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. Join our cutting-edge research program, spearheaded by Prof. Tamar Makin, as we delve into the fascinating realms of motor control, neural representation of the human body, and robotic body augmentation
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projects would be desirable. An understanding of Mendelian randomization and/or causal inference would be advantageous but not essential; full training will be given. In particular, no prior knowledge
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LMB in Cambridge and the University of Oxford. This project has worked towards production of two synaptic-resolution connectomes for an adult male and female Drosophila central nervous system (brain and
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at the Department of Chemistry at the University of Cambridge (https://www.ch.cam.ac.uk/group/michaelides ). The projects will involve the development and application of approaches for treating complex intermolecular
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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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(waterfall, fire) represented? What is the role of corticofugal projections in setting expectations? How does the auditory system integrate information over time? How does representation change with mental
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Department of Chemistry, working on the Faraday Institution Nexgenna (sodium-battery project). The project will be co-supervised by Prof. Dominic Wright, Prof, Dame Clare Grey and Prof. Steven Ley and involves
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Fixed-term: The funds for this post are available for 9 months in the first instance. We are seeking a highly motivated Postdoctoral Research Associate to join the IsoCAT Project, a collaboration
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postdoctoral researchers in synthetic organic chemistry in the Department of Chemistry at the University of Cambridge. The successful candidate will join the dynamic and collaborative research group of Professor