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18525 results for: ‘services research data create data create data’

  • Aircraft Noise and Cardiovascular Outcomes (ANCO)

    Principal Investigator - Anna Hansell This Medical Research Council grant funds the first comprehensive assessment of cardiovascular (CVD) impacts of aircraft noise near major airports in the UK.

  • Chemistry of Life

    Our research into chemical biology draws together researchers from biophysics, medicinal chemistry, synthetic organic and inorganic chemistry. Learn more about our Chemical Biology research theme.

  • Politics Dissertation

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  • Politics Dissertation

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  • Earth and Environment

    Air pollution, environmental heath, deforestation and climate change affect us all - our researchers examine how to combat the global climate crisis.

  • Groundbreaking new approach to mathematical theory

    New research from Dr Simona Paoli from the University of Leicester’s Department of Mathematics introduces a new approach to higher categorical structures. The new research constitutes a foundational and groundbreaking contribution to the field.

  • A multidisciplinary team of scientists aim to solve the mystery of magnetoreception

    A significant research grant from the Wellcome Trust will allow a team of researchers to identify the biological mechanisms through which magnetic forces affect animals, including humans

  • Discovery of a new gene enables the diagnosis for patients with rare lung disease

    As part of a large international research collaboration, scientists at the University of Leicester have helped identify a new candidate gene involved in the development of primary ciliary dyskinesia (PCD).

  • Coaching

    Posted by Martin Coffey in Postgraduate Researcher Careers on June 13, 2016 “We don’t see the world as it is, we see it as we are”. It would appear that at the moment the world is full of coaches; no, not the type you travel in.

  • Higher Education

    Cancers are responsible for millions of death every year. The study of cancer biology is therefore one of the largest areas of scientific interest. Cancer cells develop specific hallmarks through a series of mutations in both oncogenes and tumour-suppressor genes.

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