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7247 results for: ‘全开源免费AI网址导航网站源码 AigoTools✅项目合作 二开均可 TG:saolei44✅.qvpXlrlszHrJbn’

  • Politics of the International Drug Trade

    Module code: PL3142 The illegal drug trade has been estimated to take up almost 1% of all trade on Earth.

  • Sweet genes – not sweet dreams - could explain why a bad night’s sleep makes you older

    New funding support to research teams at University of Leicester to study sleep’s effects on ageing epigenetics Changes to our DNA occur as we get older and could be affected by sleep disturbance Scientists aim to find out whether this epigenetic clock plays a...

  • Regulation of Gene Expression

    Find out more about Regulation of Gene Expression research at the University of Leicester.

  • Resources

    Useful resources for higher education on gene expression and regulation.

  • Conversations With… Dr Tom Stallard

    Posted by ejb71 in Physics and Astronomy Blog on 20 November 2020 Dr Tom Stallard is the Post-graduate Tutor in the School of Physics and Astronomy as well as being an Associate Professor of Planetary Astronomy.

  • Publications

    Browse the publications written by academics where the Nucleus genomics facility at the University of Leicester has been of use.

  • 1,800 year-old evidence of Roman worship found in Leicester Cathedral dig

    University of Leicester Archaeological Services uncover evidence of a cellar and altar stone from the Roman period thought to be a private shrine or cult room, suggesting the site of Leicester Cathedral has seen religious observance for nearly 1,800 years

  • Archaeological Theory

    Module code: AR2601  What was gender like in the past? How are politics and the past entwined? How was the past different from the present? How can archaeology help us think differently about the present? These are some of the key questions posed by this exciting...

  • Launch of study into Northern Ireland social exclusion and sport

    Almost 90 per cent of people in Northern Ireland believe that sport is a good way to break down barriers between Protestants and Catholics.

  • Research shows women who feel more at risk of crime also prefer physically dominant partners

    Women who prefer physically formidable and dominant mates (PPFDM) tend to feel more at risk of crime regardless of the situation or risk factors present, according to researchers from the Department of Neuroscience, Psychology and Behaviour.

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