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of the City of London and within the world-renowned William Harvey Research Institute at Barts and The London School of Medicine, Queen Mary University of London (QMUL). The appointed person will undertake
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tailored to clinical need and patient specifics. About Queen Mary At Queen Mary University of London, we believe that a diversity of ideas helps us achieve the previously unthinkable. Throughout our history
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Mary At Queen Mary University of London, we believe that a diversity of ideas helps us achieve the previously unthinkable. Throughout our history, we’ve fostered social justice and improved lives through
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serve both as high-dimensional generalisations for well-known phenomena in random graphs and stochastic geometry, and as means to develop insight into statistical and computational challenges in
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to continue to expand its research profile as well as its study programmes across UG and PGT. This position is based in the Centre for Data Science, Statistics and Probability. Other Centres include the Centre
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conclusions from these and they will be a highly experienced user of Excel and statistics packages such as SPSS. They will be proactive in their approach to work and will be able to work both independently and
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public and global health research, education and translation of knowledge into policy and practice. The school is seeking to appoint a Research Fellow in Medical Statistics, Data Science or Health
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expertise spanning biostatistics, environmental epidemiology, data science, statistical computing and climatology. Candidates are required to either have an undergraduate degree in statistics or epidemiology
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of anticipated completion of a PhD in Medical Statistics or Epidemiology. Experience conducting independent research using routinely collected electronic health records and writing analytic code in Stata, R and/or
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include: researching issues of current or potential interest to IMMANA and the ANH Academy; producing epidemiological and statistical analyses; working on systematic reviews; and drafting research outputs