Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
, you will help guide junior team members, contribute ideas for new research directions, and support occasional public engagement activities. It is essential that you hold a PhD/DPhil (or close
-
We are seeking to appoint a highly motivated Postdoctoral Researcher to join the research group of Professor Ignacio Melero, MD PhD, at the Oxford Centre for Immuno-Oncology within the Nuffield
-
expected to be bioinformatic in nature. Applicants must have a PhD in a relevant subject, experience of macrosynteny analysis and phylogenetic analysis of gene families, and a thorough knowledge of animal
-
on qualifications and 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
-
and Henipavirus. You will be responsible for designing and carrying out experiments to develop and/or evaluate diagnostic tests towards pandemic disease, and for managing your own academic research and
-
presenting papers and posters will be part of the role. You must hold, or be close to completion of, a relevant PhD/DPhil, together with relevant experience. You will have previous experience of contributing
-
research and administrative activities. You will design and conduct experiments to investigate the role of epigenetic factors in innate immune response regulation. Your work will involve disease modelling
-
. This may include lecturing, small group teaching, and tutoring of undergraduates and graduate students. Applicants should hold a PhD/DPhil, (or close to completion) in atmospheric physics or related fields
-
will be educated to PhD level with relevant experience in molecular plant biology and evolution and will work closely with other group members to assist them with gene functional characterisation
-
especially suitable for someone with strong formal reasoning and data analysis skills who is considering progression to a PhD or further postdoctoral research in AI ethics, social choice theory