24 postdoc-in-high-voltage-engineering Postdoctoral positions at University of Cambridge
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to the regulation of complex behaviours. This will involve a range of techniques including high resolution confocal microscopy to determine receptor localisation, behavioural analysis of C. elegans and computational
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Fixed-term: The funds for this post are available for 12 months. Applications are invited for a Research Assistant (RA) to join the Prorok Lab in the Department of Computer Science and Technology
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with a multidisciplinary team of clinicians, data scientists, and data engineers to conduct epidemiological research on large-scale electronic datasets and develop common data model specifications
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and recent publications of staff and postdocs can be found on the Department's website: http://www.sociology.cam.ac.uk The post is fixed term from 1st October 2025 for 24 months (please note that the
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Lab's expertise in tumour initiation and early transformation, this project aims to intercept breast cancer before it starts, with a particular focus on individuals carrying high-risk mutations in BRCA1
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instrumentation, such as high throughput experimentation, and collaborate with experts in the field. We are looking for creative scientists to work as part of a collaborative team. Excellent organisational and
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application and in any correspondence about this vacancy. The Department holds an Athena SWAN silver award for women in Science, Technology, Engineering, Mathematics, and Medicine. The University actively
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Engineering and a strong background in experimental magnetism. The position, based within Prof Jason Robinson's research group at the Department of Materials Science & Metallurgy, is part of the project
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. The Department holds an Athena SWAN silver award for women in Science, Technology, Engineering, Mathematics, and Medicine. The University actively supports equality, diversity and inclusion and encourages
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the more extreme climates of the future and (2) redesigning root development via fine-scale perturbations of hormone dynamics with minimal off-target effects. The Jones group at SLCU has recently engineered