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About us The UCL Department of Medical Physics and Biomedical Engineering Department produces internationally leading research and integrated hands-on education in the heart of London, with close
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working across UCL and UCLH. UCL Medical Physics & Biomedical Engineering is one of the UK’s longest-established medical physics departments, with a history dating back to 1896 when the first X-ray device
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Hamilton Research areas: fundamental cell biology, non-coding RNA, mitosis, cancer, CRISPR, RNAseq Project outline: Understanding mitosis is a major aim of fundamental molecular cell biology but is also
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imaging, spatial data analysis, and machine learning. One arm of the project will seek to engineer diverse quantitative features (e.g., adapting concepts and metrics from network science [5] to characterise
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, mechanism and application of DNA-rearranging enzymes, the translational genetics of myotonic dystrophy and related unstable DNA disorders and systems biology including ‘omics analysis and computational
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. Techniques to be used: Brain imaging (fMRI) Behavioural methods (psychophysics) Python programming References Petro et al., (2014), Contributions of cortical feedback to sensory processing in primary visual
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: Theoretical approaches to information Issues of post-modernism, relativism, and information processing in both computational and post-computational frameworks. Staff: Tim Duguid , Yunhyong Kim Management
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Composite Materials Advanced Manufacture Computer-Automated Design (CAutoD) More information: Materials, Design and Manufacturing Space Systems Planetary exploration and science Debris mitigation Space power
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-edge instrumentation, such as the JEOL CRYO ARM 300 electron microscope and the Leica THUNDER Imager EM cryo-CLEM microscope. This technology allows us to target events that happen deep in the cell so we
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research into new imaging techniques at optical and radio-frequency wavelengths and work closely with collaborators in industry, biology and medicine to apply these techniques in real-world applications