[erlang-questions] Advert for: 12 fully-funded 3-year PhD scholarships at Kent
Simon Thompson
S.J.Thompson@REDACTED
Fri Feb 22 14:29:18 CET 2019
The Programming Languages and Systems (PLAS) group at the University of Kent's School of Computing invites applications for 12 fully-funded 3-year PhD scholarships (for UK/EU students).
Applications are due by the 26th April 2019.
The PLAS group is one of the largest programming languages research groups in Europe. It is currently ranked 17th worldwide by the independent CSrankings website: http://csrankings.org/#/index?plan&world.
We provide a supportive environment for research and we have a vibrant postgraduate population. We encourage our students to engage with the wider research community through attending conferences and taking internships with leading industrial companies. We are located in Canterbury, a lively and cosmopolitan historic town with convenient travel links to London and Europe.
You can apply to study for a PhD in any topic that falls within our range of expertise. We have studentships up to a value of £19,945 per annum that are available by competition.
Application process:
Select a potential supervisor (see below) and send them an informal project proposal as well as a brief CV (preferably by the first week of April 2019). Staff contact details can be found on their web pages.
Submit your formal applications through the university admission system by the 26th April 2019. Your application should include a completed online admission form; the name and contact details of two referees; an original document providing confirmation of your degree (or a transcript if the degree is not yet awarded). For non-native English speakers, a certificate of competence in English is required at IELTS 6.5 or higher, with no element less than 6.0 (or equivalent).
Programming Languages and Systems Group:
https://www.cs.kent.ac.uk/research/groups/plas/index.html
Topics suggested by our group
https://www.cs.kent.ac.uk/research/groups/plas/pgprojects.html
Applications process:
https://www.cs.kent.ac.uk/research/studyingforaphd/howtoapply.html
For general inquiries about the process, please e-mail: cs-phd-plas@REDACTED
PLAS is a large research group with potential supervisors who work across the breadth of programming languages and systems research.
*Dr Mark Batty*
(Additional scholarship: https://www.cs.kent.ac.uk/people/staff/mjb211/studentship/studentship.htm)
Concurrency; software verification; systems; relaxed memory; programming language semantics; GPU concurrency.
*Dr Laura Bocchi*
Foundations and engineering of API with complex behaviour, verification of distributed concurrent systems; behavioural types; real-time systems; transactions and transaction protocols.
*Dr Olaf Chitil*
Tracing, semantics, algorithmic debugging, type error debugging, compilation and functional programming.
*Dr Radu Grigore*
Program analysis; runtime verification; probabilistic models of computation.
*Dr Rogerio de Lemos*
Software engineering for self-adaptive systems: assurances and resilience evaluation; architecting resilient systems.
*Prof. Richard Jones*
Language implementation; memory management; garbage collection; object demographics; program analysis for improved memory management; program visualisation, rigorous performance evaluation.
*Dr Stefan Kahrs*
Expressiveness of programming languages, type systems, term rewriting, infinitary rewriting.
*Dr Stephen Kell*
Language implementation, tools, interoperability, runtimes and operating systems.
*Prof. Andy King*
Abstract interpretation, logic programming, decompilation and reverse engineering
*Dr Julien Lange*
Process calculi, automata theory, behavioural types, model checking and their application to the implementation and verification of concurrent and distributed systems.
*Dr Stefan Marr*
Language implementation techniques, concurrency, parallel programming, optimizations, tooling, debugging, virtual machines, interpreters, compilation.
*Dr Matteo Migliavacca*
On-line data processing, distributed publish-subscribe, and high-performance event processing in large scale and cloud scenarios.
*Dr Dominic Orchard*
Mathematical structure of programs; logical foundations of programming; categorical semantics; behavioural type theories; programming language design; program verification for computational science.
*Dr Scott Owens*
Semantics of shared memory concurrency; design of programming languages; formal verification for software and interactive theorem proving, especially for CakeML (https://cakeml.org).
*Dr Tomas Petricek*
Programming languages and tools, especially for data science, studying interactions of programming, bridging the gap between data and types; foundations of programming in a broad sense, including design and human experience; philosophy and history of computing and programming.
*Prof. Simon Thompson*
Functional programming in Haskell, Erlang and OCaml; refactoring functional programs: tool building. theory and practice: dependently-typed functional programming; DLT: languages for smart contracts on blockchains, including Marlowe on Cardano.
Simon Thompson | Professor of Logic and Computation
School of Computing | University of Kent | Canterbury, CT2 7NF, UK
s.j.thompson@REDACTED <mailto:s.j.thompson@REDACTED> | M +44 7986 085754 | W www.cs.kent.ac.uk/~sjt <http://www.cs.kent.ac.uk/~sjt>
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