PhD position in
Neurocomputational Linguistics
University
of Birmingham in collaboration with Google Research London
Language
comprehension is critical for effective interactions in our
social world. In
order to understand ‘who does what to whom’ in natural
language processing, the
brain needs to assign a syntactic structure to every sentence
– a process
coined ‘syntactic parsing’.
This
interdisciplinary project will
combine expertise from human neuroscience (University of
Birmingham) and
computational linguistics (Google Research London) to
determine the neural mechanisms
underlying sentence comprehension in the human brain and
advance parsing
algorithms in machines. To study natural language processing
and the underlying
neural mechanisms in humans, we will measure eye movements,
behavioural (psychophysics)
and electrophysiological responses (EEG/fMRI) in participants
reading natural
sentences from syntactically annotated corpora. We will employ
advanced machine
learning algorithms to characterize the computational
operations and neural
mechanisms underlying syntactic processing in the human brain.
Conversely, the
insights obtained from human neuroimaging (EEG/fMRI) and eye
tracking will
provide critical constraints on the parameters and algorithms
used in machine.
The
PhD position is designed to
involve a 3 month internship at Google Research London.
The
Computational Cognitive
Neuroimaging Group (Uta Noppeney) in collaboration with Google
Research London
(Bernd Bohnet, Ryan McDonald) is seeking an enthusiastic PhD
candidate with
strong analytical and quantitative abilities. Applicants
should have a background
in computational linguistics, neuroscience, computer
science, psychology, physics
or related areas. Prior experience in statistical analysis
and/or machine
learning would be an advantage.
The
Computational Cognitive
Neuroimaging Lab is based at the Department of Psychology and
the Computational
Neuroscience and Cognitive Robotics Centre of the University
of Birmingham, UK.
The centre provides an excellent multidisciplinary,
interactive and
collaborative research environment combining expertise in
cognitive
neuroimaging, psychophysics and computational neuroscience.
The psychology
department was rated 5th in the UK research assessment
exercise.
http://www.birmingham.ac.uk/schools/psychology/research/labs/comp-cog-neuro/index.aspx
http://www.birmingham.ac.uk/research/activity/cncr/index.aspx
Applications
will be considered
until 8th January 2017. The starting date is Sept/Oct 2017.
iCASE students must
fulfil the MIBTP entry requirements and will join the MIBTP
cohort for the
taught modules and masterclasses during the first term. They
will remain as an
integral part of the MIBTP cohort and take part in the core
networking
activities and transferable skills training. For further
information, please contact
u.noppeney@bham.ac.uk.
Check
eligibility and apply here:
https://www2.warwick.ac.uk/fac/cross_fac/mibtp/pgstudy/phd_opportunities/application/