32 web-programmer-developer-university-of-liverpool Postdoctoral positions at University of Cambridge in United Kingdom
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to understanding the origins and progression of paediatric brain tumours and developing new therapeutic strategies. The lab combines genetic engineering, molecular biology, and translational research to investigate
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at the Yusuf Hamied Department of Chemistry, University of Cambridge to work on the BBSRC grant "A Platform for Identifying GlycoRNA and Identifying Biases in RNA Pulldown". The role is to develop methods
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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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Science (IMS) at the University of Cambridge (https://www.mrl.ims.cam.ac.uk ). This position offers an outstanding opportunity to work within Dr. Maria Chondronikola's group, embedded in a highly
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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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, 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