Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
& Health Informatics. Contact details:Prof Vicky Slonims. Vicky.slonims@nhs.net Location: St Thomas' Campus (Becket House). Category: Research. About us: Applications are invited for a Research Assistant
-
dedicated to development, translation and clinical application within medical imaging and computational modelling technologies. Our objective is to facilitate research and teaching guided by clinical
-
at the William Harvey Research Institute (WHRI, Queen Mary University of London, QMUL), whose research aims to develop and apply computational tools to identify the genetic determinants of rare Mendelian and
-
. The successful candidate will work within a multidisciplinary team to unravel the metabolic drivers of HCC biology and transplant rejection through cutting-edge spatial multi-omics and computational metabolic
-
research programme takes a mixed methods approach. The successful applicant will have a key role in the qualitative work package which aims to understand multi-stakeholder perspectives of the C(E)TR process
-
Associate to join a growing programme investigating how age-associated changes in haematopoiesis shape inflammatory responses relevant to cardiovascular disease. Working within the School of Cardiovascular
-
the Department of Informatics, part of the Faculty of Natural, Mathematical & Engineering Sciences (NMES). The department is internationally recognised for its contributions to robotics, AI, and human-centred
-
the use of computing servers Desirable Criteria Experience fine-tuning large language models (e.g., BERT, BioGPT, MedPaLM) for clinical NLP tasks. Experience with cloud or distributed computing environments
-
Mental Health Younger Generations Programme. You will work with a friendly, supportive, passionate, and hard-working group to undertake statistical analysis of quantitative data to test hypothesis
-
planned work, including one of the UK’s only 7 Tesla MRI systems located inside a hospital environment, state-of-the-art engineering and physics laboratories, high-performance computing, and industry