Information Technology | Scholarship for Nigerians and Africans - Part 350

Curtin Business School (CBS) Innovation Scholarship

Study Subject: Computer Science

Employer:Microsoft Research Ltd, TWAS and AAS

Level:Postdoctoral

Scholarship Information: With funds provided by Microsoft Research Ltd, TWAS and AAS encourage the organization of scientific activities on the theme of Computer Science in Africa by offering financial assistance to the organizers of conferences, workshops, symposia and special meetings held in Africa.

The support is normally provided in the form of travel grants for principal speakers from abroad and/or participants from developing countries other than the country where the meeting is held. Supported speakers should be from not-for-profit research organizations. The amount provided does not exceed Euro 4,000.

Eligibility of Applicants

* TWAS, AAS and Microsoft Research Ltd. only consider applications made by the organizers of international and regional scientific meetings being held in Africa.
* Employees of TWAS, AAS and Microsoft Research Ltd., as well as employees of other industry research laboratories and anyone involved in the administration of this award, are not eligible.
* TWAS, AAS and Microsoft Research Ltd. do not provide support to individual scientists wishing to attend a scientific event, even if the event is taking place in a developing country.
* Local authorities must share in the responsibility for the event and should give proper support. Each application must show at least a (conditional) matching contribution from

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Scholarship of Faculty of Computer Science and Technology Scholarship

Job Description: We are seeking five PhD students across a range of systems. In particular, we are seeking two PhD students to investigate the implications of photonic networks on future large-scale computer systems (such as data centres or scientific computers) with a focus on power consumption reduction. The work will involve modelling large systems of chip multiprocessors with photonic interconnect using FPGA-based emulation.

These two positions are funded by the EPRSC grant EP/I004157/1 (for more details see (http://gow.epsrc.ac.uk/ViewGrant.aspx?GrantRef=EP/H040536/1)

We are seeking a further three PhD students for the ‘INTelligent Energy awaRE NETworks’ (INTERNET) project whose vision is to reduce the carbon footprint of ICT networks by at least an order of magnitude – along with a corresponding reduction in non-renewable energy consumption. PhD students would perform complimentary work across topics including: the investigation of energy-aware network protocol design and implementation for the migration of virtualised systems, performing research into the models of energy usage of networks in and between data centres, and the design and implementation of novel hardware-software interfaces. These three positions are funded by the EPSRC grant EP/H040536/1 (for more details see (http://gow.epsrc.ac.uk/ViewGrant.aspx?GrantRef=EP/H040536/1)

Candidates should have a 1st class degree in computer science, electronic engineering, mathematics or a closely related discipline, ideally with experience in one or more of the following:

* Computer architectures

* Computer networks

* Virtualization and migration

* Physical layer digital and/or optical communications

* Digital design, FPGA programming, Hardware Description Languages

Application deadline: 1 December 2010

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Postdoctoral Research Associate in Computer Vision, UK

The School of Informatics has been awarded funding from the EC for participation in a multi-site research project entitled Fish4Knowledge: “Supporting humans in knowledge gathering and question answering w.r.t. marine and environmental monitoring through analysis of multiple video streams”. The principal investigator on the Edinburgh component of the project that is responsible for process modelling and workflow execution is Dr. Jessica Chen-Burger. The project is funded from October 1, 2010 until September 30, 2013.

The research proposed here will take place in the AIAI unit of the Centre of Intelligent Systems and their Applications. CISA undertakes basic and applied research and development in knowledge representation and reasoning. Through its Artificial Intelligence Applications Institute (AIAI) it works with others to deploy the technologies associated with this research. AIAI specialises in Intelligent Systems – systems making use of the knowledge of experts, or systems that learn.

The research proposed here is funded under the EC’s Framework 7 ICT programme (Intelligent Information Management). Fish4Knowledge is a STREP (Specific Targeted Research Project).

The study of marine ecosystems is vital for understanding environmental effects, such as climate change and the effects of pollution, but is extremely difficult because of the inaccessibility of data. Undersea video data is usable but is tedious to analyse (for both raw video analysis and abstraction over massive sets of observations), and is mainly done by hand or with hand-crafted computational tools. Fish4Knowledge will allow a major increase in the ability to analyse this data: 1) Video analysis will automatically extract information about the observed marine animals which is recorded in an observation database. 2) Interfaces will be designed to allow researchers to formulate and answer higher level questions over that database.

The project will investigate: information abstraction and storage methods for reducing the massive amount of video data (from 10E+15 pixels to 10E+12 units of information), machine and human vocabularies for describing fish, flexible process architectures to process the data and scientific queries and effective specialised user query interfaces. A combination of computer vision, database storage, workflow and human computer interaction methods will be used to achieve this.

The project will use live video feeds from 10 underwater cameras as a test-bed for investigating more generally applicable methods for capture, storage, analysis and querying of multiple video streams. We will collate a public database from 2 years containing video summaries of the observed fish and associated descriptors. Expert web-based interfaces will be developed for use by the marine researchers themselves, allowing unprecedented access to live and previously stored videos, or previously extracted information. The marine researcher interface will also allow easy formulation of new queries. Extensive user community evaluations will be carried out to provide information on the accuracy, ease and speed of retrieval of information.

Project Environment and Conditions
The Edinburgh portion of the project will normally not use any specialised equipment. The image capture and supercomputer based processing are primarily NARL’s responsibility. A 500+ node compute server parallel system is also accessible by the group. Wherever possible we will use either MATLAB and C/C++ within a LINUX/UNIX environment (mainly for speed). There is some existing software related to this project. Altogether, there are 10 PCs available for use by the vision research group (consisting of about 10 members, including contract research staff, PhD and MSc students).

The UEDIN workflow team will have to liaise closely with other teams, particularly with the UCATANIA image processing team over the interaction and use of their fish detection and tracking software, the UEDIN machine vision team over the interaction and use of their fish recognition system, the CWI team over the development of properties suitable for question answering and the interaction with their systems, and the NARL team over the development of parallel workflow execution algorithms.

Application Deadline: 5th October 2010

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