Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
We are seeking a full-time Postdoctoral Research Assistant in Cerebrovascular Imaging to join the research group of Prof Thomas Okell at the Podium Institute for Sports Medicine and Technology
-
About the role We are seeking an outstanding candidate to work in the Process Dynamics group to contribute to advanced research in AI-driven X-ray imaging for metal alloy solidification
-
research aims to develop new AI for shared human-AI decision-making in healthcare imaging. This post focuses on bridging theory and application of temporal reasoning and ultrasound video analysis from
-
responsible for the design and testing of original machine-learning based methods for fetal heart biomarker discovery from the CAIFE image and video dataset. The full-time post is funded by InnoHK and is fixed
-
William Dunn School of Pathology. The project will involve the mechanistic dissection of protein quality control pathways using quantitative cell-based assays, flow cytometry-based and imaging approaches
-
quantitative cell-based assays, flow cytometry-based and imaging approaches complemented by biochemical and, where appropriate, structural methods. The successful candidate will be expected to work independently
-
on the PRISM-MTZ project funded by NERC. This project aims to quantitatively image the bulk structure and discontinuity topographies of the mantle transition zone (MTZ), to quantify trade-offs between
-
unprecedented precision, one at a time and in real time (Nature, 2010; Nature Nanotechnology, 2012, 2017; Science 2025). The project involves a combination of optical imaging, nanofabrication, data analysis, and
-
research aims to develop new AI for shared human-AI decision-making in healthcare imaging. This post focuses on bridging theory and applications of the Learning-to-Defer (L2D) framework, building on recent
-
sensing, using advanced cryo-imaging approaches. You will work within a collaborative research environment and in close partnership with scientists at Diamond Light Source, the UK’s national synchrotron