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Overview of Data Science Practice
https://le.ac.uk/modules/2026/ma7441
Module code: MA7441 Data science is the process of extracting reliable insights and conclusions from data.
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Higher Education Pathway for Armed Forces
https://le.ac.uk/cls/study/armed-forces
Higher Education Pathway for Armed Forces (HEPAF) is a unique project that provides routes into all health careers for service leavers via a specialist pathway.
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Expert opinions cover the eight principles underlying tumour growth
https://le.ac.uk/news/2016/april/expert-opinions-cover-the-eight-principles-underlying-tumour-growth
PhD student Mohan Harihar from the Department of Molecular and Cell Biology has written an article for Think: Leicester explaining the eight ‘Hallmarks of Cancer’.
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People
https://le.ac.uk/mcb/people
Find out more about the people who work, study and research in the Department of Molecular and Cell Biology at the University of Leicester.
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Research areas
https://le.ac.uk/research/institutes/structural-chemical-biology/areas
The Institute is composed of 26 active research groups, each led by an academic from the department of Molecular and Cell Biology, Chemistry, Cardiovascular Sciences or Respiratory Sciences, collaborating with colleagues from across the University.
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Sue Shackleton
https://le.ac.uk/people/sue-shackleton
The academic profile of Dr Sue Shackleton, Associate Professor at University of Leicester
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Research students
https://le.ac.uk/psychology-vision-sciences/people/research-students
Browse a list of Psychology and Vision Science research students. Find out more about our PhD and PsyD students and their research interests, alongside ways to get in touch.
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First Forty Years of Physics at Leicester 1924-64
https://staffblogs.le.ac.uk/physicsastronomy/2023/01/04/first-forty-years-of-physics-at-leicester-1924-64/
Professor Ken Pounds looks back upon the first four decades of Physics at the University of Leicester.
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Medical Biosciences (Microbiology) MBiolSci
https://le.ac.uk/courses/medical-biosciences-microbiology-mbiolsci/2026
Infectious diseases are responsible for a third of all deaths and are a major cause of death in infants and young children. The sheer diversity of pathogens and the exotic mechanisms they have evolved to escape the human immune system make them a fascinating topic to study.
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Martyn Mahaut Smith
https://le.ac.uk/people/martyn-mahaut-smith
The academic profile of Professor Martyn Mahaut Smith, Professor of Cellular Physiology at University of Leicester