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8272 results for: ‘2024亲测国际多语言交友约会/虚拟会员/语音视频通话/全球支付源码✅项目合作 二开均可 TG:saolei44✅.dywYWXzcbBS’

  • David McVey

    The academic profile of Dr David McVey, Post-doctoral Research Associate at University of Leicester

  • Alix Blockley

    The academic profile of Dr Alix Blockley, Lecturer School of Biological Sciences at University of Leicester

  • Vaccines for higher education

    The immune system is highly complex, bringing together a multitude of different cells and signals. Read more about the immune system through a simple overview provided by The University of Leicester.

  • Whose Reality?

    Posted by Martin Coffey in Postgraduate Researcher Careers on April 22, 2020 Although having a number of social media accounts, I seldom post on them.

  • Our environment over a billion years: travel through time into Leicester’s deep past

    Experts at the University of Leicester host an evening exploring landscape change and biodiversity in the city and county on Thursday 23 March

  • Ralf Schmid

    The academic profile of Dr Ralf Schmid, Associate Professor in Bioinformatics at University of Leicester

  • Contemporary Issues in Biochemistry

    Module code: BS3004 This module is centred on the use of scientific principles to communicate contemporary issues in biochemistry.

  • Could human tissue be used by researchers in place of animal models

    Professor Peter Bradding from the Department of Infection, Immunity and Inflammation is involved in a research project examining how to expand the use of human lung tissue to reduce the use of animal tissue in research.

  • Leicester academic leads study published today in the New England Journal of Medicine

    Professor Gavin Murphy (pictured), British Heart Foundation (BHF) Professor of Cardiac Surgery in our Department of Cardiovascular Sciences at Leicester is the lead author of a new study that has shown that patients having heart surgery do not benefit if doctors wait until a...

  • Study suggests human impact has created a plastic planet

    Planet Earth’s oceans and lands will be buried by increasing layers of plastic waste by the mid-century due to human activity, according to research led by researchers from the Department of Geology.

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