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- Develop original numerical methods for facility simulation in presence of expansion waves - Demonstrate improved estimates of rate constants for two-temperature models - Contribute
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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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’ (PHOENIX), led by Associate Professor Thomas Aubry (University of Oxford). Using a combination of laboratory experiments, field work and numerical modelling, PHOENIX aims to improve our understanding
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samples and disease models. Working closely with a dynamic and multidisciplinary team of clinicians and scientists, you will help generate and interpret high-resolution datasets that reveal new insights
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) information-theoretic active learning, and c) capturing uncertainty in deep learning models (including large language models). The successful postholder will hold or be close to the completion of a PhD/DPhil in
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and optimising assays aimed at target validation; principally through immunogenicity assays in animal models. You will also conduct experiments aimed at understanding the tumour-immune microenvironment
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cancer progression, immune evasion, and therapeutic resistance. We place a strong emphasis on the use of spatial biological approaches applied to human tumour models including organ/tumour perfusion, slice
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Postdoctoral Research Associate in Sum-Frequency Generation Microscopy of Biomolecular Self-Assembly
structure formed in model phospholipid membranes. Beyond this, the project aims to expand such investigations to bilayer systems and also investigate the influence of lipid-protein and protein-protein
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, Oxford, Leeds, Reading, and Birmingham) and international (Utrecht University, ETH Zurich, Université Catholique de Louvain, etc.) scientists to use new modelling resources and methods to elucidate drivers
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form, how it is generated and how it evolves. In particular we focus on the evolution and evolvability of vertebral counts, and we use various species of Lake Malawi cichlids as our model organism