The department of Electrical and Computer Engineering (ECE) at the University of Arizona has multiple Ph.D. positions starting from Spring or Fall 2016. Application deadline is flexible but the sooner the better.
The successful candidates are expected to work on one of the following exciting research areas: (1) Wireless network and security, including cross-layer optimization, physical-layer security, and spectrum enforcement; (2) Security & privacy for the cloud and big data, especially privacy-preserving data analytics (e.g., for social or location-based applications); (3) Security in cyber physical systems, such as autonomous vehicles, and internet-of-things. (4) Security in next-generation networks.
Preferred candidates should be self-motivated, responsible, and have the curiosity and determination to explore the path to develop himself/herself into an outstanding researcher. Candidates with EE, CS or other relevant backgrounds will be considered, and an earned Master degree is preferred. A solid background in either one of the following will be a plus: wireless communications & networking, signal processing, security/cryptography, machine learning, optimization/game theory, or strong system implementation skills. Previous research experience is a plus but not necessary.
If you are interested, please send your CV/resume, transcripts, GRE and TOEFL scores, and any other information that you believe is helpful for your application in one email to Prof. Ming Li at ming.li@arizona.edu. For more detailed information about the research done at the Wireless Networks and Cyber Security (WiSeR) lab, please visit http://wiser.arizona.edu/
The University of Arizona was established in 1885, and ranks among the top 20 public research institutions in the U.S. The graduate program in the department of ECE consistently ranks in top 30s in USNews. The department has 34 faculty members and 6 IEEE Fellows. The city of Tucson, AZ has a population near 1 million in its metropolitan area.