-
We are seeking to appoint an experienced administrator to join the Faculty Postgraduate Directorate Masters Programmes Team. The team is focussed around supporting the development of new and
-
health. You will play a major role in the CoP design and be responsible for its delivery. You will be led by Dr Adeniyi Olagunju, Principal Investigator of the Perinatal Pharmacology Group in tandem with
-
of Artificial Intelligence (AI). The primary responsibilities include automating the development of input measures to better account for non-linear geographic relationships between variables, creating a tool that
-
variety of research projects within the Department of Equine Clinical Sciences. You will work closely with equine medicine specialist Amie Wilson who is the primary investigator on this project, and Dean
-
aspects of cellular stress responses, with a focus on the liver. You should have a BTEC Higher Level (or equivalent) in a relevant biomedical science subject, a master¿s level qualification (and a PhD) is
-
opportunities for genuinely original, innovative research that brings together diverse disciplines to make a positive impact on the world. The HSS Research and Impact Team is responsible for supporting academic
-
attributes. You should have evidence of study at Postgraduate Level 7 (CPD or Master¿s modules). In addition, you will need to demonstrate evidence of scholarly activity within healthcare or clinical
-
of issues affecting clinical education, and evidence of CPD are essential attributes. You should have evidence of study at Postgraduate Level 7 (CPD or Master¿s modules). In addition, you will need
-
biomedical research projects, including biomarker discovery efforts and equine age-related disease studies for example tendon disease and osteoarthritis. The principal investigator, Professor Mandy Peffers and
-
the direction of Dr Adeniyi Olagunju, and in tandem with other members of the group and collaborating scientists, you will lead the establishment of a library of human relevant iPSC- and primary tissue derived