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rhythms in population health. This post is part of a large, interdisciplinary research programme, offering attractive opportunities to work across conventional boundaries and pursue hypothesis-led science
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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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are looking for a candidate interested in developing their own research questions in alignment with the interests and skills present in the research team. We are particularly interested in investigating how
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the UKRI through the Frontier Guarantee Programme to Dr Jani R Bolla. The work is to be conducted in his lab in the Department Biology, University of Oxford, South Parks Road, Oxford, OX1 3RB
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using in vivo models. The role will also include supporting the general program of research within the pre-clinical team. You will work in Containment level 2 and 3 facilities to assist with murine
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part of a wider programme of work to establish that membraneless organelles, biological liquid droplets, are effectively regions of organic solvent, suspended inside cells and that the properties of each
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part of an interdisciplinary team that is using large datasets to improve the diagnosis and treatment of tuberculosis, including the development of new drugs, we’d love to hear from you. Benefits
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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 will be based within the Oxford Centre for Functional MRI of the Brain (FMRIB), reporting to Professor Saad Jbabdi. Our group develops, validates and applies novel MRI techniques for basic
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University of Oxford. The Centre aims to develop the first therapies to stimulate heart repair and regeneration in patients with heart failure, for which there are currently no effective treatments. REACT is a