Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Listed
-
Category
-
Program
-
Field
-
Joint Faculty of Medical Sciences (FMS) and NIHR Applied Research Collaborative North East and North Cumbria (ARC NENC) PhD Studentship – Developing a risk-based care pathway for patients with
-
Interested in how to shape the future of care for patients suspected of having a TIA? This PhD will explore how a risk-stratified approach could be developed with key stakeholders. National guidelines advise
-
PhD Studentship: Development of a robust hydrological modelling framework for drought risk assessments Award Summary Tax-free annual living allowance £26,546 a £20,000 research training grant and
-
terms and conditions please go to your countries GREAT Scholarship web page on the British Council’s GREAT Scholarship web site . How To Apply You apply for this scholarship online separately to your
-
assemblage changes. Determining how coral reef fish food webs and energy pathways are connected along extended depth gradients of 0-90 meters. Based in Newcastle, and with international supervision, you will
-
). Overview This project develops next‑generation models to predict where earthquake‑triggered landslides will occur and how far they will travel; critical information for protecting lives, infrastructure, and
-
have shown that the micro-scale maps they generate can be analysed using computational geography methods developed for macro-scale data. Our toolkit, STExplorer, enables access to these approaches
-
. We have shown that the micro-scale maps they generate can be analysed using computational geography methods developed for macro-scale data. Our toolkit, STExplorer, enables access to these approaches
-
UKRI rate). Overview The vHABIT project develops an informatics-driven framework for monitoring, modelling, and managing floor vibration risk in occupied buildings. As climate adaptation drives
-
‑related pathways, long‑distance wind‑borne dispersal may also represent a significant introduction route for insects. This project aims to develop and apply quantitative methods to assess wind-borne