33 web-developer-university-of-liverpool Postdoctoral research jobs at University of Cambridge
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be able to communicate material of a technical nature and be able to build internal and external contacts. You may be asked to assist in the supervision of student projects, the development of student
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. This will require the application of a range of techniques, from in-vitro biochemistry to novel, next-generation sequencing approaches. Most skills can be acquired and developed throughout the post, offering
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the starting date and show a developing profile of publications. The successful candidate will be capable of engaging with sophisticated conceptual problems relevant to the project. Applicants will ideally
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., musicology or medieval studies) or have evidence that the PhD will be completed by the starting date and show a developing profile of publications. The successful candidate will be capable of engaging with
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University Department of Psychiatry, clinical institutions such as Cambridgeshire and Peterborough NHS Foundation Trust, and with a secondment to industry (Akrivia Health) to advance science and develop common
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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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evolution of a recently discovered family of clonally transmissible cancers which affect several species of marine bivalves. This new position is part of an ERC-funded project examining genome evolution in
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://www.aria.org.uk/opportunity-spaces/nature-computes-better/scaling-compute/ The objective of our project, funded within this programme, is to develop a scalable and modular simulation framework. At the lowest level
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, at the University of Cambridge, UK. The Research Assistant will work together with a team of students and research collaborators on the development of learning-based control policies that facilitate
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A Research Associate post is available in the Drosophila Connectomics Group directed by Greg Jefferis and Matthias Landgraf in the Department of Zoology at the University of Cambridge. The applicant