27 assistant-professor-and-human-centric-computing PhD positions at Queensland University of Technology
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What you'll receive The CSIRO Industry PhD Program (iPhD) aims to produce the next generation of innovation leaders with the skills to work at the interface of research and industry in Australia
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of Philosophy . The first step is to email Professor Amanda Lotz detailing your academic and research background, your motivation to research in this field and interest in this scholarship, and
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at the same time you apply for admission to a QUT Doctor of Philosophy . The first step is to email Associate Professor Angela Watson detailing your academic and research background, your motivation
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short courses Browse by study area Business Creative industries Digital capability Education Engineering Health Justice Languages Law Leadership Science Transformation Need help deciding? Based on your
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are available to support: postgraduate students wanting to complete part of their Australian program in the US students seeking to complete a full US masters PhD students wanting to complete research in the US as
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) before the human eye can see them. The principal aim of this PhD research program is to develop methods to improve the hyperspectral image classification using deep learning techniques. The developed
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provider how to adjust their compression depth, rate, and release to improve patient outcomes. The student will have the opportunity to work with a range of engineers, doctors, and paramedics and will help
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of Research Excellence in Paediatric Palliative Care. The PhD program involves the design and conduct of a Discrete Choice Experiment (DCE) to explore how consumers prioritise different elements of paediatric
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consistent with results. This is difficult as it requires humans to evaluate pain in animals which cannot be directly measured. This process is not systematic in the way it comes up with models and has thus
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Wilson Award is available to promote spine research at QUT, and honours the stellar contribution to scientific innovation in spine research made by our former Research Director, Professor Clayton Adam