Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
on transplant using multimodal medical data. You will be responsible for literature review, data cleaning, model development and implementation. You should possess a relevant PhD (or near completion) in
-
work. About you Applicants should hold a PhD/DPhil, or be near completion of a PhD/DPhil in structural biology, biochemistry or related area and have gained experience in a wide range of structural
-
system with integrated sensors. You should hold or be near completion of a PhD/DPhil with relevant experience in the field of robotics, biomedical engineering, information engineering, electrical
-
protocols. You will work with limited supervision to design and accurately execute experiments to achieve the goals of the project. Applicants should hold, or be close to completion of, PhD/DPhil in Biology
-
The Kelly lab welcomes individuals with diverse career backgrounds – PhD-level scientists in any discipline with expertise in data and programming, or software engineers outside of academia looking to change
-
immunologist with a strong interest in T cell biology and immune regulation. The ideal candidate will have: • A PhD (or be close to completion) in immunology or a related biomedical field
-
will have a PhD (or close to completion) in engineering, materials science, physics or other closely-related disciplines. You will be a highly motivated and responsible researcher with strong curiosity
-
projects with colleagues in partner institutions, and research groups. You must hold a PhD/DPhil (or near completion). You will have extensive experience in live imaging of the spleen using 2-photon
-
biotechnology, design, and engineering across Northumbria, Oxford, and Imperial, as well as start-ups and SME collaborators who are already bringing novel materials to market. Applicants should hold a PhD, or be
-
at the intersection of these research areas. You should hold, or be close to completing, a PhD/DPhil in mathematics, statistics, physics, engineering, data science, or a related field. Experience in cancer