The Digital Economy promises to transform the ways in which we work, 
shop, travel, learn, socialise and play. It is transforming many aspects 
of society, particularly with regard to technology and provides research 
challenges in both technical and social areas, including:
 Ubiquitous Computing - where millions of computers are embedded in the 
world around us;
 Location-Aware Computing - taking advantage of knowing the 
geographical position of these fixed or mobile computing and 
communications devices.
 Pervasive Data  with a vast amount of data generated and captured on 
processes, products and people, the potential for gathering information 
from this data is huge but subject to the availability and development 
of algorithms and infrastructure able to cope with such vast amounts of 
often distributed data. Further, the processing of data is increasingly 
subject to privacy-protecting policies and other restrictions such as 
regional legislation, strengthening the need for tools which are not 
only functional but satisfy requirements such as transparency, privacy 
and personalisability.
 Science in Society - considering the technological, social or legal 
perspectives to the grand challenge associated with modelling users, 
their environment and the interactions between the two.
We are interested in students from a wide variety of backgrounds 
including computer science, engineering, human factors, psychology, 
sociology, business, geography, social science and the arts, providing 
that they have an excellent first degree and can demonstrate an 
enthusiasm for interdisciplinary research.
Would you like to be at the heart of this revolution, researching across 
the disciplines to explore new uses of ubiquitous and location-aware 
computing, creating new technologies, or studying their impact on 
peoples lives?
The Doctoral Training Centre at the University of Nottingham is 
recruiting on to a unique PhD programme for the Digital Economy. 
Supported by RCUK and over 30 industry partners, we are training a 
community of over 70 PhD students to become the next generation of 
research leaders in this field within industry or academia.
Our current industry partners include: Active Ingredient, Aerial, BBC, 
Blast Theory, BT, EADS Astrium, EUROCONTROL, Fhios, Guidance Monitoring, 
HP, HW Communications, IBM, innovITS, Leica Geosystems, Location and 
Timing KTN, Logica, Microsoft, Network Rail, Nokia, Nottingham 
Scientific, Ordnance Survey, PARC, Scott Wilson, SERCO, Sharp Labs 
Europe, Thales, Trinity House, TRL Technology.
Our students will benefit from:
 A fully-funded four-year PhD programme that integrates a leading-edge 
research project with research training in interdisciplinary skills.
 A personalised pathway through this programme that enables students to 
gain a balance of skills across key technology areas, future 
applications and human and societal issues.
 Training in innovation and ingenuity to equip students for careers in 
industry, from global companies to start-ups.
 A three-month internship at one of our partners including BBC, BT, 
EADS Astrium, HP, IBM, Logica, Microsoft, Network Rail, Nokia, Ordnance 
Survey, PARC, Scott Wilson, Sharp Labs Europe and Thales (see list above)
 Regular seminars and meetings with industry representatives to develop 
contacts with future employers.
 An enhanced stipend of 15,600 per annum as well as a personal laptop.
 Supervision from international leaders in the associated disciplines.
 Use of over 3m state-of-the-art facilities including positioning and 
sensing testbeds and transport simulators.
 Career guidance support tailored to individual needs.
 Office and laboratory space on Nottinghams award-winning Jubilee Campus.
We have funding for ten UK/Home and two UK/Home/EU students. Places are 
also available for those in receipt of four year independent 
funding/scholarships. Please note we do not have any international 
studentships available, so please do not enquire.
Further information can be found on the Horizon Doctoral Training Centre 
website; www.horizon.ac.uk. Informal enquiries may be addressed to Miss 
E Juggins, tel: 0115 823 2316 or Email: Emma.Juggins@Nottingham.ac.uk
Application forms are available from Miss E Juggins or downloadable from 
http://horizon.mrl.nott.ac.uk/students/how-to-apply/opportunities.html 
and should be returned by email with a detailed CV and a statement of 
research interests to Emma.Juggins@Nottingham.ac.uk. Shortlisting date: 
18 January 2012. Interview date: on 1 February 2012.
-- 
_______________________________________________________________________
Professor Uwe Aickelin
School of Computer Science - Intelligent Modelling & Analysis (IMA)
The University of Nottingham, Jubilee Campus,
Nottingham, NG8 1BB, UK.
Phone: +44 (0)115 95 14215
Email: uwe.aickelin@nottingham.ac.uk
web:   http://ima.ac.uk/aickelin
_______________________________________________________________________
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