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of Biomedical Computing as part of the School of Biomedical Engineering & Imaging Sciences, King’s College London, a vibrant community of engineers designing and translating technology into the clinical
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to the clinic The post holder will be based in the Department of Biomedical Computing as part of the School of Biomedical Engineering & Imaging Sciences, King’s College London, a vibrant community of engineers
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science, or specific skills to a team delivering a project or program. Through this work, you will build scientific independence, develop new science and leadership skills, and establish a growing
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associate with expertise in data science to join the King’s BHF Centre of Research Excellence and contribute to a growing cardio-immunology research programme. Inflammation is increasingly recognised as a key
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processes that underly normal and abnormal cardiovascular and metabolic function and drive the translation of this strong basic science into advances in clinical practice. Our community of world-renowned
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) Understanding of basic cell culture techniques (media preparation, sterile conditions) Computer literacy is essential for the recording and communication of results Experience of work in sterile conditions
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departments: Cardiovascular Imaging, Cancer Imaging, Early Life Imaging, Imaging Chemistry & Biology, Biomedical Computing, Surgical & Interventional Engineering, Imaging Physics & Engineering and Digital Twins
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program. Through this work, you will build scientific independence, develop new science and leadership skills, and establish a growing reputation externally. Your role will be to lead a research project
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of Biomedical Engineering and Imaging Sciences is a cutting-edge research and teaching School dedicated to development, translation and clinical application within medical imaging and computational modelling
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, advanced imaging techniques and numerical modelling. About the role A successful candidate will be working on the EPSRC funded project New perspectives in photocatalysis and near-surface chemistry: catalysis