Research Associate position University of Cambridge PheneBank project

From the corpora list

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We are inviting applications for a 33 month Research Associate position in the University of Cambridge, working with Nigel Collier (PI) on the PheneBank project. The deadline for applications is the 2nd August 2015 with the successful candidate expected to start at the end of September/early October 2015.

The project is funded by the UK’s Medical Research Council (MRC) and aims to develop natural language processing techniques for learning to recognize and encode biomedical concepts (i.e. phenotypes, diseases and genes) and their relationships in the scientific literature.

Responsibilities of the successful candidate include but are not limited to research into innovative machine learning and text/data mining techniques that address the challenge of understanding phenotypes and their relationships in the free text literature. The project will also require the post holder to take part in system architecture design and implementation, performance evaluation, paper/proposal/document/report writing and presentation of research findings.

The project will involve close collaboration with colleagues at the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute, Charité – Universitätsmedizin Berlin, the European Bioinformatics Institute, the University of Colorado and within the University of Cambridge. The project will take place in the Language Technology Lab at the Department of Theoretical and Applied Linguistics: http://ltl.mml.cam.ac.uk/ and the larger community of NLP researchers within the University of Cambridge. This arrangement provides an excellent environment for research and career development, as the post holder will benefit from the expertise of both NLP and domain partners in this multidisciplinary project.

For further information including application details please see: http://www.jobs.cam.ac.uk/job/7346/


Nigel Collier
Principal Research Associate
Department of Theoretical and Applied Linguistics
University of Cambridge, UK
http://www.mml.cam.ac.uk/nhc30

PhD research funding — Computational Stylistics — Trinity College Dublin

From  Carl Vogel
to: FORENSIC-LINGUISTICS@jiscmail.ac.uk

Funding is available for a research project at the intersection of
machine learning, text analysis and dialogue analysis conducted within
the Computational Linguistics Group (www.cs.tcd.ie/clg) of the Centre
for Computing and Language Studies (www.scss.tcd.ie/ccls) in the
School of Computer Science and Statistics at Trinity College Dublin
(www.scss.tcd.ie).

The funding covers EU-level tuition fees and a stipend of 16K euro per
annum, and is aligned with the Centre for Next Generation Localisation
(CNGL; www.cngl.ie).  The funding may extend to three years, from September
2013.

The successful candidate will have an excellent academic record (first
class or II.1 primary degree) in cognitive science, linguistics,
computer Science, or a related discipline. She or he will be highly
motivated, with strong written and oral communication skills and will
possess demonstrable proficiency in computer programming.

English language certification is required of applicants for whom
English is not a native language, the minimum requirements are: IELTS:
7.0+, TOEFL iBT: 100+, TOEFL pBT: 600+, CEF: C1+, or equivalent.
Applicants will have to satisfy the general admission requirements for
postgraduate research study at Trinity College Dublin
(www.tcd.ie/Graduate_Studies/)

The successful candidate will participate in the Structured PhD
Programme within the School of Computer Science and Statistics
(www.scss.tcd.ie/postgraduate/structuredphd/).  The research will be
supervised by Carl Vogel (www.scss.tcd.ie/~vogel), and the successful
candidate will participate in research activities of the Computational
Linguistics Group and CNGL, for example, the Dublin Computational
Linguistics Research Seminar (www.cs.tcd.ie/clg/DCLRS).

Prior to application for admission as a postgraduate research student,
through the Graduate Studies office, as indicated above, to be
considered for this funding, applications should be sent to Tricia
Fowler (Tricia.Fowler@tcd.ie) in the form of:
– an academic CV
– an English language transcript of academic records
– a research statement
– three letters of reference with contact details of referrees.

Fullest consideration will be given to applications that arrive
before August 2, 2013.

PhD research funding — Computational Stylistics — Trinity College Dublin

From  Carl Vogel
to: FORENSIC-LINGUISTICS@jiscmail.ac.uk

Funding is available for a research project at the intersection of
machine learning, text analysis and dialogue analysis conducted within
the Computational Linguistics Group (www.cs.tcd.ie/clg) of the Centre
for Computing and Language Studies (www.scss.tcd.ie/ccls) in the
School of Computer Science and Statistics at Trinity College Dublin
(www.scss.tcd.ie).

The funding covers EU-level tuition fees and a stipend of 16K euro per
annum, and is aligned with the Centre for Next Generation Localisation
(CNGL; www.cngl.ie).  The funding may extend to three years, from September
2013.

The successful candidate will have an excellent academic record (first
class or II.1 primary degree) in cognitive science, linguistics,
computer Science, or a related discipline. She or he will be highly
motivated, with strong written and oral communication skills and will
possess demonstrable proficiency in computer programming.

English language certification is required of applicants for whom
English is not a native language, the minimum requirements are: IELTS:
7.0+, TOEFL iBT: 100+, TOEFL pBT: 600+, CEF: C1+, or equivalent.
Applicants will have to satisfy the general admission requirements for
postgraduate research study at Trinity College Dublin
(www.tcd.ie/Graduate_Studies/)

The successful candidate will participate in the Structured PhD
Programme within the School of Computer Science and Statistics
(www.scss.tcd.ie/postgraduate/structuredphd/).  The research will be
supervised by Carl Vogel (www.scss.tcd.ie/~vogel), and the successful
candidate will participate in research activities of the Computational
Linguistics Group and CNGL, for example, the Dublin Computational
Linguistics Research Seminar (www.cs.tcd.ie/clg/DCLRS).

Prior to application for admission as a postgraduate research student,
through the Graduate Studies office, as indicated above, to be
considered for this funding, applications should be sent to Tricia
Fowler (Tricia.Fowler@tcd.ie) in the form of:
– an academic CV
– an English language transcript of academic records
– a research statement
– three letters of reference with contact details of referrees.

Fullest consideration will be given to applications that arrive
before August 2, 2013.