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Liane Canas

Dr Liane Canas

Postdoctoral Research Associate

Biography

Dr Liane Canas is a Postdoctoral Research Associate in the Department of Biomedical Engineering, School of Biomedical Engineering & Imaging Sciences.

    News

    Three types of long-COVID for people experiencing symptoms for 12 weeks or more

    New research shows at least three distinct ‘types’ of long covid for people experiencing symptoms for 12 weeks or more.

    bame-covid

    Early COVID-19 can be mistaken as vaccine side-effects, warn researchers

    Early symptoms of COVID-19 can’t be clearly differentiated from vaccine side-effects, new findings show. Researchers recommend that if people show symptoms of...

    covid vaccine

    ExeTera software provides deeper analytics of mass data sets from ZOE COVID Study App

    ExeTera has allows researchers to manage very large time series datasets on millions of app users to make significant scientific contributions to...

    ExeTera

    Double vaccination halves risk of Long COVID

    Adults who have received a double vaccination are 49% less likely to have Long COVID should they contract a COVID-19 infection.

    A women receives a vaccine

      News

      Three types of long-COVID for people experiencing symptoms for 12 weeks or more

      New research shows at least three distinct ‘types’ of long covid for people experiencing symptoms for 12 weeks or more.

      bame-covid

      Early COVID-19 can be mistaken as vaccine side-effects, warn researchers

      Early symptoms of COVID-19 can’t be clearly differentiated from vaccine side-effects, new findings show. Researchers recommend that if people show symptoms of...

      covid vaccine

      ExeTera software provides deeper analytics of mass data sets from ZOE COVID Study App

      ExeTera has allows researchers to manage very large time series datasets on millions of app users to make significant scientific contributions to...

      ExeTera

      Double vaccination halves risk of Long COVID

      Adults who have received a double vaccination are 49% less likely to have Long COVID should they contract a COVID-19 infection.

      A women receives a vaccine