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[AUDITORY] doctoral fellowships in the "CRC - Hearing acoustics" at the University of Oldenburg



Dear list,

the new collaborative research centre (CRC/SFB) “Hearing acoustics: Perceptual principles, Algorithms and Applications – HAPPAA” (see https://uol.de/sfb1330/) at the University of Oldenburg is granting doctoral fellowships for potential PhD students (see https://uol.de/en/sfb-1330-hearing-acoustics/jobs/doctoral-fellowships/). We are looking for candidates with an academic master degree (or equivalent) in acoustics, physics, bio-medical engineering, hearing research, technical audiology or related disciplines. The doctoral fellowships are meant to allow the successful applicants to start independently into a later-to-be-defined PhD project in connection with the collaborative research centre (CRC)
The hearing research in Oldenburg is providing an attractive research environment within international teams and modern research facilities. Please contact us for any question about the CRC and the stipends. Interested candidates should send an application, a CV and copies of their university diplomas to: 

Prof. Dr. Dr. Birger Kollmeier
E-Mail: 
birger.kollmeier(at)uol.de, cc to manfred.mauermann(at)uol.de

Sonderforschungsbereich 1330 Hörakustik
Universität Oldenburg,
D - 26111 Oldenburg - Germany
phone (+49) 441 798 5470

Kind regards

Manfred Mauermann

 

 

 

Dr. rer. nat. Manfred Mauermann

Fakultät für Medizin und Gesundheitswissenschaften

Dep. f. med. Physik und Akustik

Abteilung medizinische Physik

Telefon: 0441-798-3528

Fax     :  0441-798-3902

 

 

 

 

 

Von: AUDITORY - Research in Auditory Perception [mailto:AUDITORY@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx] Im Auftrag von Joshua Reiss
Gesendet: Montag, 5. November 2018 17:24
An: AUDITORY@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Betreff: Hearing-related PhD studentship available for UK residents

 

BBC and Queen Mary University of London have an ICASE PhD studentship available for a talented researcher. It will involve researching the idea of intelligent mixing of broadcast audio content for hearing impaired audiences.

 

Project Description

This project will explore new approaches to audio production to address hearing loss, a growing concern with an aging population. The overall goal is to investigate, implement and validate original strategies for mixing broadcast content such that it can be delivered with improved perceptual quality for hearing impaired people.

Soundtracks for television and radio content typically have dialogue, sound effects and music mixed together with normal-hearing listeners in mind. But a hearing impairment may result in this final mix sounding muddy and cluttered. First, hearing aid strategies will be investigated, to establish their limitations and opportunities for improving upon them with object- based audio content. Then different mixing strategies will be implemented to counteract the hearing impairment. These strategies will be compared against each other in extensive listening tests, to establish preferred approaches to mixing broadcast audio content.


Requirements and details

This is a fully funded, 4 year studentship which includes tuition fees, travel and consumables allowance and a stipend covering living expenses.

Skills in signal processing, audio production and auditory models are preferred, though we encourage any interested and talented researchers to apply. A successful candidate will have an academic background in engineering, science or maths.

The student will be based in London. Time will be spent  between QMUL’s Centre for Digital Music and BBC R&D South Lab, with a minimum of six months at each.

The preferred start date is January 2nd, 2019.
All potential candidates must meet UK residency requirements, e.g. UK citizen or EU citizen with long-term residence.

If interested, please contact Josh Reiss at joshua.reiss@xxxxxxxxxx .

 

 

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Prof. Josh Reiss, Queen Mary University of London

Blog: intelligentsoundengineering.wordpress.com/ Twitter: @IntelSoundEng

Youtube: www.youtube.com/user/IntelligentSoundEng

Publications: www.eecs.qmul.ac.uk/~josh/publications.htm

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