Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Listed
-
Employer
-
Field
-
psychology, cognitive science, human-computer interaction, communication science, or a related field. Strong background in psychological research methods (e.g., behavioral, experimental, interviews, mixed
-
collaborators. Mentor junior colleagues and students. Write, present, and publish research findings in peer-reviewed journals. Knowledge and Experience Requirements: PhD degree in statistics, computer sciences
-
reputable peer-reviewed journals. More Information Location: Kent Ridge Campus Organization: College of Design and Engineering Department : Electrical and Computer Engineering Employee Referral Eligible
-
agencies. Qualifications • PhD in Robotics, Mechanical Engineering, Mechatronics, Computer Vision, or a closely related field. • Strong expertise in robot design and at least one of
-
on energy-efficient circuit design and software-hardware co-optimization, with exciting applications in graph-based prediction. What we’re looking for: A PhD in Electrical and Computer Engineering or a
-
with industry research and requirements. More Information Location: Kent Ridge Campus Organization: College of Design and Engineering Department : Electrical and Computer Engineering Employee Referral
-
research proposals and reports. Job Requirements Possess a PhD degree obtained in a related discipline (transportation engineering, operations research, computer engineering/science, or related disciplines
-
: Develop and apply new machine learning and computer vision methods such as large-language models and vision-language models for high-throughput analysis of video data. For NeuroAI focus: Apply data-driven
-
participate in seminars, workshops, and public engagement activities Job Requirements: Doctor of Philosophy in Communication, Psychology, Sociology, Human-Computer Interaction, or a related social science
-
Computer Engineering. More information on the laboratory is available at www.neuroimaginglab.org . The MNNDL group at NUS is a multidisciplinary team studying the human neural bases of cognitive functions