13 web-programmer-developer-"St"-"UCL"-"St" PhD scholarships at University of Cambridge
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project entitled: “Development and application of computational tools for the early detection and deconstruction of chromosomal instability in cancer” For further information about the research group
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Hamied Department of Chemistry. For further information about the research group, including their most recent publications, please visit their website at http://www-balasubramanian.ch.cam.ac.uk . Project
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will be defined, decomposed and assessed through attention to artefacts and practices across a range of sectors and disciplines. Focusing on the automotive context, the project will develop a
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and Technology (CST) at the University of Cambridge. The goal of this PhD programme is to launch one "deceptive by design" project that combines the perspectives of human-computer interaction (HCI) and
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Starting Date 1 Jan 2026 Is the job funded through the EU Research Framework Programme? Horizon Europe - MSCA Marie Curie Grant Agreement Number 101227453 Is the Job related to staff position within a
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The UKRI-funded 5-year project, 'Colombo: Layered Histories in the Global South City', selected for funding by the European Research Council under its 'HORIZON' programme, is recruiting to its
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. Insights gained will inform the development of novel therapeutic strategies for HFpEF and broader cardiometabolic disease. Training & Development The successful candidate will receive broad training in
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to cancer biology, as well as a strong commitment of developing and using new tools to address cutting-edge questions in these fields. This studentship is embedded within the piRNA team, consisting of both
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therapy (Simpson et al. in preparation*). When these local metabolic / immunologic changes happen during pancreatic cancer evolution remains unknown. More importantly, whether these spatial changes can be
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to develop novel, bio-inspired neural networks that flexibly and robustly control locomotion in multi-limbed robots. "Self-organised clocks for reliable spiking computation" (Supervisor: Prof Timothy O'Leary