Student Research Information and Opportunities
One of the best things you can do as undergraduate to help you learn about
graduate school is to participate in an undergraduate research project.
Should you decide graduate school is for you, your undergraduate
research experience will increase your chances of being admitted
and of receiving a
graduate fellowship
to pay for it.
You can participate in research either part-time during the school year,
or full-time during the summer.
This page provides
some resources to help you learn more about what research is and how
to do it well,
as well as some opportunities for getting involved in research,
either during the academic year here at Texas A&M or by doing
an internship, either here or elsewhere.
Assorted Research Resources
Here are some links to resources that you may find useful to
help you learn more about research.
Research Internship Programs
Undergraduate internship opportunities
-
Research Experience for Undergraduates
is a summer program offered by the Department of Computer Science and Engineering that spans 10 weeks
and involves undergraduate students from Texas A&M as well as
students from other colleges and universities.
Program announcement and application details are available
at www.cse.tamu.edu/REU.
Application Deadline: February 15, 2009
-
Undergraduate Summer Research Grants (USRG)
provide support for summer research with faculty
in the Dwight Look College of Engineering at Texas A&M University.
Program announcement and application details are available
at http://essap.tamu.edu/usrg.
Application Deadline: February 29, 2009
-
CRA-W Distributed Research Experiences for Undergraduates (DREU).
The CRA-W DREU matches outstanding women undergraduates and undergraduates in underrepresented groups with faculty mentors for a summer of research at the mentor's institution. Program details and application information are available at http://www.cra-w.org/dmp.
Application Deadline: February 15, 2009
Others:
-
National Science Foundation Funded REU
(Research Experience for Undergraduates) Programs.
There are many summer research programs around the country
that are sponsored by the National Science Foundation.
A list of them is available at
http://www.nsf.gov/crssprgm/reu/list_result.cfm?unitid=5049.
Application Deadline: vary by program -
most have application deadlines in February and March for
the summer.
Academic Year Research Opportunities at TAMU
University Undergraduate Research Fellows Program
One excellent program at Texas A&M is the
University Undergraduate Research Fellows Program.
From their webpage: "If you're looking for more independent research,
the University Undergraduate Research Fellows Program is the most
prestigious independent study opportunity available to undergraduates
at Texas A&M. As a fellow, you'll participate in two semesters of
research during your senior year that culminate in a senior honors
thesis and a symposium presentation. A close master-apprentice
relationship between student researchers and faculty advisors helps you
discover your potential for serious research and helps prepare you
for graduate studies."
Part-Time Research Opportunities (CPSC 485 Credits and/or $$)
There are many exciting research projects being carried out by faculty
in the Computer Science Department.
One way for undergraduates to get involved in these projects is by
taking CPSC 485 credits (which can often be used to satisfy technical
electives on your degree plan and are a required part of the
Engineering Scholars Program).
This is arranged individually between you and the faculty member.
Individual initiative is important in approaching faculty to ask about
research opportunities.
The mentors can help you identify which faculty members are working
in areas that are of interest to you.
Here are a list of some professors in the Department
of Computer Science that have indicated they are interested in
discussing research possibilities with undergraduates.
Please note this list is not exhaustive - if you are interested
in working with a professor that is not listed below, go ahead
and contact them - nothing ventured, nothing gained!
- Nancy Amato :
Motion planning, computational biology, robotics, computational geometry, animation, CAD, VR, parallel and distributed computing, parallel algorithms, performance modeling, and optimization.
- Jianer Chen:
Algorithms and complexity, computer networks, bioinformatics, computer graphics.
- Ricardo Gutierrez-Osuna:
Intelligent sensors, speech processing, face recognition, machine olfaction, neuromorphic computation, mobile robotics, pattern recognition, machine learning.
- Tom Ioerger:
Artificial intelligence, machine learning, intelligent agents, bioinformatics.
- Lawrence Rauchwerger:
Compilers for parallel and distributed computing, parallel and distributed C++ libraries, adaptive runtime optimizations, architectures for parallel computing.
- Frank Shipman:
Intelligent user interfaces, hypertext, computers and education, multimedia, new media, computers and design, computer-human interaction, computer-supported cooperative work.
- Jennifer Welch:
Algorithms and lower bounds for distributed computing systems, in particular mobile ad hoc networks, distributed shared objects, and metamorphic robot systems.
Please send comments, complaints, additions, etc. regarding
this webpage and/or the Mentoring Pool to
amato@cse.tamu.edu.
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