32 parallel-processing-bioinformatics Fellowship research jobs at UNIVERSITY OF SOUTHAMPTON
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immunotherapy. You will join a multidisciplinary team spanning immunology, and bioinformatics, with access to advanced flow cytometry, 10X Genomics, in vivo imaging platforms. Key responsibilities To work within
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interests in tumour immunology, T cell engineering, and immunotherapy. You will join a multidisciplinary team spanning immunology, and bioinformatics, with access to advanced flow cytometry, 10X Genomics, in
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robust, reproducible genomic bioinformatics pipelines, using modern workflow systems and high‑performance computing platforms. Produce rigorous, high‑quality research outputs that advance applied genomic
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discipline. You will have demonstratable experience in field-based research, microbiology (field and laboratory), bioinformatics (e.g. metagenomics and high-performance computing), and handling plants and soil
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(field and laboratory), bioinformatics (e.g. metagenomics and high-performance computing), and handling plants and soil, particularly roots (i.e. rhizosphere collection and root traits). You will have a
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Semiconductor fabrication is one of the most complex and precision-driven forms of manufacturing. At nanometre scales, even subtle variations in process conditions can introduce defects that degrade
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in process conditions can introduce defects that degrade device performance, reduce yield, and drive up production costs. Addressing this challenge requires new modelling approaches that can capture
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into the ocean turbulence dynamics shaping the distribution of Antarctic sea ice, and the feedbacks of ice processes on ocean stratification and circulation. The role will focus on the analysis of a range of
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-integrated photonics components, novel photonic integrated circuits (PICs) for secure communication will be demonstrated. The laboratory-level development will be combined with a large-scale wafer process with
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development will be combined with a large-scale wafer process with industrial-level uniformity and spatial resolution by using the pilot 300-mm semiconductor process line available in collaboration with AIST