32 computer-science-intern-"https:" "https:" "https:" positions at Carnegie Mellon University
Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Listed
-
Category
-
Program
-
Field
-
Carnegie Mellon University is a private, global research university that stands among the world’s most renowned education institutions. With ground-breaking brain science, path-breaking performances
-
described by the university policy on research faculty appointments, https://www.cmu.edu/policies/faculty/appointments-research-faculty.html . The Department of Mathematical Sciences has over forty tenure
-
: You understand that technology problems areoften people problems. You have a track record of evolving organizational culture without compromising the team's spirit. Qualifications: Bachelor’s degree in
-
Carnegie Mellon University (CMU) – a global leader in education, research, and innovation across computing, artificial intelligence, engineering, science, business, arts, and public policy – invites
-
The Institute for Computer-Aided Reasoning in Mathematics (ICARM) is a new NSF Mathematical Sciences Research Institute located at Carnegie Mellon University. Our mission is to: Empower mathematicians to take
-
recognize multimodal human behavior in real world settings (e.g., Affective Computing, AI for Healthcare: pain measurement, monitoring mental health disorders). The successful candidate will have primary
-
careers in the fields of science, technology, engineering or mathematics. The program provides instruction in biological sciences, chemistry, physics, mathematics, and computer science, with emphasis
-
Systems (S3D) is one of the seven academic departments of the Carnegie Mellon School of Computer Science (SCS). S3D hosts the SCS PhD programs in Software Engineering (SE) and Societal Computing (SC), along
-
these tools in their daily work. That's where you come in. Computing Services, the central IT group, needs someone who can help faculty, staff, and students use AI to enable them more productive. You'll partner
-
Institute (HCII) is a living laboratory where we investigate the relationship between computer technology, human activity, and society. Founded in 1993, the HCII is a place where we work to understand and