FW: Senior research associate in Transport and Health modelling

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Rolf Moeckel
FW: Senior research associate in Transport and Health modelling

If you are an experienced transport modeler and would like to work at the University of Cambridge (England), here is an exciting position to work on a project to integrate health and transport models.

Best,
Rolf.

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Dr. Rolf Moeckel
Rudolf Mößbauer Assistant Professor

Technical University of Munich
TUM Institute for Advanced Study
Department of Civil, Geo and Environmental Engineering
Professor for Modeling Spatial Mobility

Arcisstr. 21
80333 Munich
Germany

Phone +49 89 289 22699

rolf.moeckel@tum.de<mailto:rolf.moeckel@tum.de> www.bgu.tum.de/en/msm

From: James Woodcock <jw745@medschl.cam.ac.uk> Date: Sunday, 18. October 2020 at 14:12
Subject: Senior research associate in Transport and Health modelling

Please could you circulate this to any relevant lists or potentially interested parties.

The MRC Epidemiology Unit is looking to appoint a senior research associate in the area of transport and health modelling.

This appointment is an exciting opportunity to play a leading role in the development of statistical and simulation models of transport and health for cities around the world.

This position is based in the Unit's multidisciplinary Public Health Modelling team, and will be part of the multidisciplinary European Research Council GLASST project.

The GLASST project (Global and Local health impact ASSessment of Transport) is led by Dr Woodcock, with collaborators at TU Munich, ISGlobal (Barcelona), University of Chicago, the University of Oxford, and the MRC BioStatistics Unit.
http://www.jobs.cam.ac.uk/job/27028/

Many thanks,
James

Recent papers:

Implications of COVID-19 control measures for diet and physical activity, and lessons for addressing other pandemics facing rapidly urbanising countries Major investment in active travel in Outer London: impacts on travel behaviour, physical activity, and health Estimating traffic contribution to particulate matter concentration in urban areas using a multilevel Bayesian meta-regression approach The long-term impact of restricting cycling and walking during high air pollution days on all-cause mortality: Health impact Assessment study How does mode of travel affect risks posed to other road users? An analysis of English road fatality data, incorporating gender and road type ---
Dr James Woodcock
Reader in Transport and Health Modelling
Programme Lead Public Health Modelling
European Research Council Consolidator Grant holder
jw745@cam.ac.uk<mailto:jw745@cam.ac.uk> phone: +44 1223 91 1931
https://scholar.google.co.uk/citations?hl=en&user=4n5VJBIAAAAJ&view_op=l...