Studentships for PhD study in Informatics@Edinburgh

Discussion in 'Pro/Engineer & Creo Elements/Pro' started by Don Sannella, Dec 20, 2004.

  1. Don Sannella

    Don Sannella Guest

    Studentships for PhD study in
    the School of Informatics at
    the University of Edinburgh
    ---------------------------

    FORTY research studentships are available for:

    * UK students
    * EU students
    * students worldwide

    Many of these are full studentships, paying your tuition fees and a
    stipend of 12000 pounds to cover living expenses in your first year,
    rising in second and third years. The rest pay your fees and a
    contribution of 6000 pounds per year towards living expenses. Payment
    of fees for non-EU students is subject to successful competition for
    an Overseas Research Studentship. PhD students are encouraged to make
    contributions to teaching, for example by leading tutorial groups, and
    for this you can expect to earn an additional 500-1000 pounds per year.

    These studentships are funded from a variety of sources. New this
    year are five full studentships in the Schools of Informatics and
    Engineering & Electronics funded by Wolfson Microelectronics plc.
    Also new are Principal's Scholarships; these are prestigious prizes
    awarded to a few of the most promising new PhD students each year,
    which provide an extra 2000 pounds per year for living costs on top of
    any other funding that is offered.

    Informatics
    ---------------------------

    Informatics is the study of information and computation, in both
    natural and engineered systems. It comprises a vast range of
    scientific and engineering endeavour and has enormous economic and
    social impact.

    The University's School of Informatics brings together the former
    Departments of Artificial Intelligence, Cognitive Science and Computer
    Science, together with the Artificial Intelligence Applications
    Institute. The School possesses a combination of breadth and
    strength unparallelled elsewhere in the UK and competitive world-wide;
    as an intellectual endeavour it is strikingly original.

    The School is the only university grouping in the UK to have
    achieved the top 5*A rating in Computer Science in the UK government's
    2001 Research Assessment Exercise round, and it is the UK's biggest
    research group in this area. We currently have around 215 students
    studying for PhD, and around 150 for MSc.

    PhD study
    ---------------------------

    PhD study is carried out within one of our six research Institutes:

    ANC: Institute for Adaptive and Neural Computation
    CISA: Centre for Intelligent Systems and their Applications
    ICCS: Institute for Communicating and Collaborative Systems
    ICSA: Institute for Computing Systems Architecture
    IPAB: Institute of Perception, Action and Behaviour
    LFCS: Laboratory for Foundations of Computer Science

    ANC fosters the study of adaptive processes in both artificial and
    biological systems; two themes are the study of artificial learning
    systems and the analysis and modelling of brain processes. CISA
    undertakes basic and applied research and development in knowledge
    representation and reasoning. Through its applications institute AIAI,
    it works with others to deploy the technologies associated with this
    research. ICCS pursues basic research into the nature of
    communication among humans and between humans and machines, using
    text, speech and graphics, and the design of interactive dialogue
    systems, using computational and algorithmic approaches.

    ICSA seeks development of a better understanding of systems
    components, both hardware and software, and their integration and
    interaction; this involves not only improving their raw performance
    and cost-effectiveness, but also making them more connectable and
    interoperable, more reliable, more usable and more applicable. The
    interests of IPAB are how to link computational perception,
    representation, transformation and generation processes to external
    worlds---whether real or virtual. The mission of LFCS is to achieve a
    foundational understanding of problems and issues arising in
    computation and communication through the development of appropriate
    and applicable formal models and mathematical theories.

    Projects
    ---------------------------

    A very wide range of research projects is available for PhD study. Here
    is an (incomplete!) list of project areas; see

    http://www.inf.ed.ac.uk/postgraduate/phdprojects.html

    for some information on each of these.

    ANC: Institute for Adaptive and Neural Computation
    --------------------------------------------------
    Flytrap: Building a Volumetric Map of the Fly Brain
    Flies in Space
    Exploration and Visualisation of Complex Data on Demand
    Development of Disparity and Spatial Frequency Preference in Visual Cortex
    Understanding Species Differences in Visual Maps

    CISA: Centre for Intelligent Systems and their Applications
    -----------------------------------------------------------
    A Proof Management Tool
    Automating Diagrammatic Reasoning
    Improving Support for Mathematics in Mechanical Theorem Provers
    Multi-Agent Coordination in Open Environments
    Game-Theoretic Analysis of Multiagent Communication
    The Role of Communication in Multiagent Reinforcement Learning
    A Computational Model of Lying
    Controlling Open Multiagent Systems
    Argumentation-Based Ontology Conflict Resolution
    Human/Robotic Task Achieving Team

    ICCS: Institute for Communicating and Collaborative Systems
    -----------------------------------------------------------
    Probabilistic Models of Human Parsing
    Integrating Linguistic and Visual Processing
    Dynamic Bayesian Networks for Speech Recognition
    Probabilistic Approaches to Natural Language Generation
    Translation of Text to British Sign Language
    Robust Construction of Semantics
    Robust Semantic Interpretation
    Statistical Machine Translation for Biomedical Domains
    Microphone-Array Based Speech Recognition
    Language Models for Multiparty Conversations
    Hidden Speech Production Models
    Multimodal Information Access
    Head Motion Synthesis for Lifelike Conversational Agents
    Multi-Unit Acoustic Models for Speech Recognition
    Induction of Wide-Coverage Categorial Lexicon from Large Amounts of
    Unlabeled Text
    Use of Intonation in Spoken Language Generation for Human-Machine Dialogue
    Temporal Semantics
    Grammar-Driven Language Models
    Automated Musical Analysis
    Projecting Discourse Annotation from Parallel Corpora
    Answering Comparison Questions: What's the Difference?

    ICSA: Institute for Computing Systems Architecture
    --------------------------------------------------
    Skeletal Parallel Programming
    Automatic Test Pattern Generation and Scan Insertion for Asynchronous Circuits
    Noise-Tolerant Asynchronous Circuits
    Data-Dependent Processing for Energy-Aware Systems
    Combining Model Checking and Theorem Proving
    Automated Synthesis of Architectures and Compilers
    Energy and Area Modelling for Architecture Synthesis
    Low-Power Multi-Threaded Architectures
    Reconfigurable Data-Parallel Structures for Embedded Computation

    LFCS: Laboratory for Foundations of Computer Science
    ----------------------------------------------------
    Engineering Electronic Proof
    Independence-Friendly Temporal Logic
    Questions on Modal mu-Calculi
    Concurrency in (Computational) Linguistics
    Archiving of Scientific Data
    Integrity Constraints for XML and Beyond
    Keys for XML
    Provenance in Databases
    Vectorizing XML
    Randomized Algorithms for Transportation Polytopes
    Complexity of Approximate Counting
    Algorithmic Verification of Recursive Probabilistic Systems
    Schema-Directed XML Publishing
    A Security Model for XML
    XML Query Languages
    Service-Oriented Computing for the Overlay Computer
    PEPA Nets: Modelling Mobile Systems
    Performance Modelling with Process Algebras
    Computational Models for Systems Biology
    A Logic of Computational Effects
    Proof Carrying Code for the Grid
    Security for Mobile Devices
    Algebraic and Logical Foundations of Formal Software Development
    Topological Models of Computation
    Constructive Set Theories and their Applications
    Proof Theory for Programs and Processes
    Type Systems for Computational Effects
    Mathematical Models for Concurrent and Mobile Computation
    Modalities for Name Generation: Logic, Proof and the Meaning of New
    Designing Services in Service-Oriented Architecture
    Combinations and Abstractions of Formal Games
    Links: Web Programming, Faster, Better, Cheaper

    Further information
    ---------------------------

    Information about graduate study, the School of Informatics, the
    University as a whole and the city of Edinburgh is available from:

    http://www.inf.ed.ac.uk/postgraduate/
    http://www.inf.ed.ac.uk/
    http://www.ed.ac.uk

    You can email queries to our Graduate Secretary at:



    or to individual members of teaching staff. Application forms are
    available from:

    http://www.ed.ac.uk/studying/postgraduate/applications/forms.html

    The application form should be returned before the end of March or
    earlier if possible. Applications for an Overseas Research Studentship
    must be completed by the beginning of February.
     
    Don Sannella, Dec 20, 2004
    #1
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