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We have an exciting opportunity for a Postdoctoral Research Assistant in Quantitative Spatial Data Analysis for Colorectal Precancer to join the multidisciplinary GO-PRECISE colorectal precancer
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We have an exciting opportunity for a Postdoctoral Research Assistant in the Interpretation of Spatial Transcriptomics and Proteomics for Colorectal Cancer. You will join the GO-PRECISE team at
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Postdoctoral Research Associate in Forest Resilience, Climate Change, and Human Health in the Amazon
Change Institute, School of Geography and the Environment, University of Oxford. The post holder will have responsibility for developing research on the ecology, climate change and remote sensing
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. The post holder will be a member of a research group with responsibility for carrying out research for NERC grant ‘Cruising the whale superhighway: The evolution, biomechanics, and ecological drivers
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establish and validate microfluidic co-culture systems using human glomerular cells and benchmark these platforms against human kidney multi-omic and spatial datasets. These systems will be further developed
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systems modelling including technical knowledge (e.g., in data science, input-output modelling, applied economic modelling, environmental and ecological assessments, GIS, comparative risk assessments), as
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tract, how immunity develops in early life, and how it goes awry in devastating inflammatory diseases such as necrotising enterocolitis and inflammatory bowel disease. Spatial ‘omics and single cell
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of conventional and spatially resolved angle resolved photoemission spectroscopy with spin resolution. The post holder provides guidance to less experienced members of the research group, such as PhD and project
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understanding of myocardial regeneration, neoangiogenesis, immunomodulation, and anti-fibrosis at the molecular level, with spatial resolution. To be successful in this role, you will hold a relevant PhD/Dphil
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group aims to determine regulatory pathways affected by disease by implementing the use of spatial proteomics combined with transcriptomics and live imaging. The total proteome of a neuron includes a vast