60 assistant-professor-and-human-computer-interaction PhD positions at Curtin University in Australia
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Discovery Project “Living Together: New Approaches to Multispecies Conflict and Coexistence” exploring the social and political dimensions of human-animal-environment relationships. A raft of social and
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Scholarship base Merit Based Value CSIRO shall award the student an iPhD Program Scholarship annually (GST exempt), starting at $35,000 (2025 rate), indexed at 3% annually, for a maximum of 4 years. This is
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(CRT) program (the Program) is a funding program of the Western Australian (WA) Future Health Research and Innovation (FHRI) Fund. The FHRI Fund provides a secure source of funding to drive health and
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of the STAMP RSV Program, supported by the Stan Perron Charitable Foundation. The PhD candidate will play an important role in developing models of RSV transmission and vaccination efficacy to inform
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Status: Open Applications open: 25/11/2024 Applications accepted at any time View printable version [.pdf] About this scholarship Description/Applicant information The CSIRO Industry PhD Program
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documented prior to the commencement of enrolling into the program. Enquiries Associate Professor Russel PJ Kingshott - R.Kingshott@curtin.edu.au Scholarships Email Alert Sign up now
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welcomed on accessibility, digital communication, mis/disinformation, online communities, and digital activism. Student type Current Students Future Students Faculties and centres Faculty of Humanities
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Professor Kingshott, you may be invited to apply for the scholarship by completing an Expression of Interest to join the program, via Curtin’s EOI form . All potential candidates will be interviewed as part
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qualifications in psychology, human factors, artificial intelligence, human computer interaction, or a discipline that could shed light on individual and team dynamics within the context of command and control
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there have received criticism from human rights advocates and academics since the Royal Commission into Aboriginal Deaths in Custody (RCIADIC) in 1989. Youth detainees are amongst the most vulnerable