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at the Yusuf Hamied Department of Chemistry, University of Cambridge to work on the BBSRC grant "A Platform for Identifying GlycoRNA and Identifying Biases in RNA Pulldown". The role is to develop methods
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organoid and across organoids, enhancing our theoretical understanding of the emerging information content within the single organoid and across the array, through the development of analytical and modelling
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in Cambridge. The mission statement of the group is "developing statistical methods to use genetic variation to answer clinically important questions about disease aetiology and prevention". The three
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calculations and Brownian Dynamics simulations. The group is looking for a highly motivated and driven postdoctoral researcher to contribute strongly to a wave of ongoing developments deploying this technology
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on the electrosolvation force under development in the group. The planned investigations are primarily experimental in nature, but will proceed in close conjunction with insight from theory and simulations. The ideal
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class of signalling molecule that acts during embryonic development to generate a variety of cell states. In response to distinct threshold levels of morphogen signalling, cells follow different fates and
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use a range of optical methods to examine the interactions in colloidal and molecular systems and relate the experimental findings to theories on the electrosolvation force under development in
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calculations and Brownian Dynamics simulations. The group is looking for a highly motivated and driven postdoctoral researcher to contribute strongly to a wave of ongoing developments deploying this technology
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to develop and implement the academic, theoretical, and policy-applied work components of the project. The PDRA position has three primary work packages: Work Package 1 (Case Study Fieldwork): The PDRA will be
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at the Barts Cancer Institute (Queen Mary University of London). This role will involve analysing existing spatial-omics data sets and developing novel computational tools to understand the risk of developing