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relevant skills acquired and will also be determined by the funding available. About you Applicants will hold a PhD/DPhil or be near completion of a PhD/DPhil in a subject relative to Structural Biology
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on a broad range of measurement problems in biology. The research requires expertise in single molecule fluorescence experiments: specifically in building or modifying experimental set-ups for optical
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Leedham (colorectal cancer biology), Dan Woodcock (cancer genomics), Helen Byrne (mathematical modelling), and Jens Rittscher (computational pathology and imaging AI), offering a unique opportunity to work
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data to build hypothesis and test them in laboratory models. You will contribute ideas for new research projects, collaborate in the preparation of scientific reports and journal articles and act as a
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tomato and pepper as model systems. Work in Oxford will build on our extensive experience in studying bacterial virulence mechanisms and the role of the plant microenvironment in disease development
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Oxford’s Department of Orthopaedics (NDORMS) as well as collaborators in Bristol and Cardiff. You should have a PhD/DPhil (or be near completion) in robotics, computer vision, machine learning or a closely
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on qualifications and relevant skills acquired and will also be determined by the funding available. About you You should hold a PhD/DPhil, or be close to completion, of a relevant PhD/DPhil with a proven record of
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an industry partnered project for translational drug discovery. The role will involve analysing large scale omics and spatial datasets from both primary patient samples and advanced in vitro model systems
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evaluations, attacks on and defensive mechanisms for safe multi-agent systems, powered by LLM and VLM models. Candidates should possess a PhD (or be near completion) in Machine Learning or a highly related
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proteome in heart-specific cell lines and primary tissue. It will utilize disease model systems to characterize unique cell surface signatures for cardiomyocytes, coronary endothelial cells, and fibroblasts