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8858 results for: ‘毕设ssm584网上挂号系统 jsp毕业设计✅项目合作 二开均可 TG:saolei44✅.ElkMptrjqLVZmpZ’

  • Surface analysis

    Browse The University of Leicester's Advanced Microscopy Facilities research and surface analysis.

  • Our University leads national forum in Azerbaijan

    Our University has led a national forum on graduate employability in Baku, Azerbaijan.

  • Study uses bacteriophages to treat livestock as an alternative to antibiotics

    A new study has looked into using bacteriophages as an alternative to antibiotics to treat common infections in livestock.

  • Super-Resolution Radial Fluctuations

    Super-Resolution Radial Fluctuations (SSRF) is a calculation to generate in general 2D super-resolution image from an image sequence which can be acquired on most common fluorescence microscopes, without the necessity for special sample preparation.

  • What did you learn at the museum today? Second study

    This research project explored the impact of Renaissance funding on museum education, looking specifically at impact on pupils’ learning.

  • Monitoring wound infections

    Explanation of how hospitals monitor patients after surgery to find out how many go on to develop a wound infection.

  • Financial Sustainability and Climate Change

    The need to strengthen financial markets, make them more resilient to challenges resulting from climate change and able to support green transformation requires in-depth research.

  • Leicester professor to advise on driving and diabetes

    Professor Pratik Choudhary has been appointed Chair of the Secretary of State for Transport's Honorary Medical Advisory Panel on driving and diabetes.

  • Empathy-led healthcare is a crucial element for ensuring patient satisfaction, says study.

    Patients treated with greater empathy by healthcare staff report increased levels of satisfaction with their care, an important measure linked to patient outcomes

  • Fossil study sheds light on ancient water-to-land transition

    The research team’s findings, published in The Royal Society’s Biology Letters, show how ostracods began to swim into estuaries about 420 million years ago during the Silurian Period, beginning their exploration of many new habitats.

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