63 postdoctoral-image-processing-in-computer-science PhD positions at Monash University
Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
guardrails or clear precedent, humanity now contends with a technology that has potential to reshape valued parts of our social life, individually and collectively. In assessing the impacts of generative
-
We have several PhD and Research Assistant (RA) opportunities available in areas such as Multimodal Large Language Models (MLLM) for human understanding, MLLM safety, and Generative AI. If you have published in top-tier conferences (e.g., CVPR, ICCV, ECCV, NeurIPS, etc.), you will have a strong...
-
science to improve health outcomes for women and their families in public healthcare settings. Your PhD research will form part of a wider research program focused on implementing lifestyle improvement
-
analytical imaging methods, then working with collaborators to apply these methods to biomedical research, diagnostic imaging and beyond. Research projects vary from purely theoretical, to computational
-
academic background in Chemical Engineering, Chemistry or a related field Experience with experimental design, sound knowledge on laboratory experiments, reactor construction, and process optimization
-
" "Machine-learning-based imaging processing" webpage For further details or alternative opportunities, please contact: haoran.ren@monash.edu.
-
I supervise computational projects in electron microscopy imaging for investigating materials at atomic resolution. Some projects centre on analysing experimental data acquired by experimental
-
for probing the atomic world. Co- supervisors are typically collaborators from within the Physics of Imaging group. Example project areas are: Developing ways to image atoms in space, energy and time Designing
-
computing/ computer science, engineering, social science, science, community development). They will be committed to undertaking research that supports First Nations people and communities in accessing and
-
use imaging surveys at X-ray, optical, infrared and radio wavelengths to measure the emission from stars, active galactic nuclei, warm dust, atomic hydrogen and relativistic electrons. Spectroscopic