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22274 results for: ‘how many words should i use for my literature review’

  • 1st February 2014 Sol 530

    Posted by jbridges in Mars Science Laboratory Blog on February 1, 2014 We have encountered a new sort of landscape, our first sand dune, at a locality we call Dingo Gap.  We will soon see a lot more of these in time as we traverse across to Mt. Sharp.

  • LEGO: The Anti-Corporate Corporation?*

    Posted by Martin Parker in School of Business Blog on March 5, 2014 Martin Parker, Professor and Culture and Organisation at the School, underlines the apparent paradox of the popularity of anti-corporate sentiment within contemporary culture.

  • Gene study provides AI insight into a leading cause of dementia

    Artificial intelligence expert at University of Leicester supports study of vascular smooth muscle, which are affected by NOTCH3, a gene known to play a role in small blood vessel diseases

  • Cerebral Haemodynamics in Ageing and Stroke Medicine

    Learn more about the research group Cerebral Haemodynamics in Ageing and Stroke Medicine, including current research and group members.

  • Projects

    COVID-19 National Core Study - Longitudinal Linkage Collaboration, part of the Longitudinal Health and Wellbeing Core study 2020-2022 Medical Research Council: £430,000; University of Leicester: Project lead: Professor John Gulliver CuBES Copper Basin...

  • Jo B

    Professor of Organization and Consumption

  • Protein Structure and Function

    Module code: BS2093 The module will consist of lectures and laboratory classes that mesh together to provide a detailed understanding of how cells generate and use energy.

  • Protein Structure and Function

    Module code: BS2093 The module will consist of lectures and laboratory classes that mesh together to provide a detailed understanding of how cells generate and use energy.

  • Protein Structure and Function

    Module code: BS2093 The module will consist of lectures and laboratory classes that mesh together to provide a detailed understanding of how cells generate and use energy.

  • First skeletal evidence of leprosy in British red squirrels revealed by University of Leicester study

    The first-ever skeletal evidence of leprosy in British red squirrels has been identified in a University of Leicester-led study.

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