===================================================================== Applications are invited for one full-time PhD studentship (with scholarship) for a period of 3 years, at the Department of Informatics, Bioengineering, Robotics, and System Engineering, University of Genoa, Italy. ===================================================================== The position will start on Nov 1st, 2016 on the following research project: ACTION-PERCEPTION TRANSFER IN VISUAL AND VISUO-HAPTIC BEHAVIOR _Deadline for Applications: June 10th, 2016_ Experiencing the sensory feedback gained from movements allows us to learn the contingencies and correlations between actions and sensory events. Accordingly, sensing "educates" motor action, but, conversely, and more elusively, motor practice can "educate" sensing. The proposed research aims at investigating the interplay between action and perception at different levels: (1) modelling early action-perception transfer in visual feature extraction (cf. neural coding of visual properties) and perceptual judgement processes (decoding stages); (2) experiments on bidirectional perceptual-action influence - including the development of systems and devices that integrate vision and haptics; (3) applications in neuromotor and cognitive rehabilitation, in which action is used to educate perception and perception is used to educate action. The project will provide the opportunity to work on neural modeling, visual and visuo-haptic psychophysics, and robotics. Experimental, modeling, and theoretical approaches might be pursued with a different accent according to personal attitude. * HOW TO APPLY Candidates must have: - University degree at M.Sc. level (or expect to obtain it by October 31st, 2016) in Bioengineering, Computer Science, Physics, or related disciplines; - attitude for problem solving and interest in experimental work; - essential skills comprise Matlab and/or C/C++/C# or Python programming. Online application is possible till June 10th, 2016 (at noon) Italian time Full details on the call and the application procedure are available at: http://www.studenti.unige.it/postlaurea/dottorati/XXXII/ENG/ http://phd.dibris.unige.it/biorob/index.php/how-to-apply Prospective students, please contact: Silvio P. Sabatini (silvio.sabatini@unige.it) or Vittorio Sanguineti (vittorio.sanguineti@unige.it), providing your CV and qualifications, the name and contact details of two references, and a description of your research interests. * WHERE The research will be conducted jointly at "The Physical Structure of Perception and Computation (PSPC) Lab", and the "Neuro-engineering and Neuro-robotics lab (NEUROLAB)", led by Silvio P. Sabatini and Vittorio Sanguineti, respectively. PSPC-Lab has a long-standing expertise in visual coding and multidimensional signal representation, robot perception and computer vision. In the last years, the lab's research activity focused on the analysis of the structural mechanisms of visuo-spatial cognition, responsible for orienting and interacting in the 3D space. NEUROLAB (http://www.neurolab.dibris.unige.it/) focuses on experimental studies on neural control of movement, in normal and pathologic conditions. Recent activity aimed at investigating the computational basis of motor skill learning, and how this process can be facilitated by robots and other interactive technologies. Our labs are located in Genoa, a small beautiful town in northernItaly, both from historical (its historical center is the largest of Europe) and naturalistic point of view (sea and mountains coexist creating a unique landscape). Genoa is only 1.30h away from Milan by train and connected by plane to Rome (1.00h), London (2h) and Paris (1.30h). Regards, -- --------------------------------------------------------------------- Silvio P. SABATINI, PhD [PSPC Research Group] Professor of Bioengineering DIBRIS - University of Genova | e_mail:silvio.sabatini@unige.it Via Opera Pia, 11A | phone: +39 010 3532092/3532794 I-16145 Genova (ITALY) | fax: +39 010 3532289/3536533 URL:http://pspc.unige.it --------------------------------------------------------------------- "Imagination is more important than knowledge..." [Albert Einstein]