Gaël gaves a seminar untitled “Using machine learning to understand cognition from brain images” at the Gatsby computational neuroscience unit in UCL:
http://www.gatsby.ucl.ac.uk/events/external-seminars/abs/Gael%20Varoquaux.html
Gaël gaves a seminar untitled “Using machine learning to understand cognition from brain images” at the Gatsby computational neuroscience unit in UCL:
http://www.gatsby.ucl.ac.uk/events/external-seminars/abs/Gael%20Varoquaux.html
We are looking for a programmer to join our research group, Parietal team, at INRIA, to work on nilearn a library applying advanced machine learning and signal processing to functional brain imaging.
As a programmer, you will be taking part to the NiConnect research project, developing tools for the analysis of “functional connectomes”: brain connectivity infered using functional MRI. The project unites neuroscientists, data-miners, statisticians and clinical researchers to transfer recent advances in basic neuroscience to clinical diagnostic tools. Your duties will be to work hand in hand with the computer science and statistics researchers to turn the research code into a solid and well documented Python library usable by clinical researchers. In
particular, to make the core data-processing routines more usable, the project will develop specific data visualization. The technologies used will rely on the scientific Python stack and scikit-learn machine learning library.
Speaking French is not a requirement, as it is an international team.
Working at Parietal is a unique opportunity to improve your skills in numerical computing and statistical data processing in Python. In addition, working on an open source stack, will give you premium experience of open source community management and collaborative project development.
INRIA is the French computer science research institute. It recognized world-wide as one of the leading research institutions and has a strong expertise in machine learning. You will be
working in the Parietal team that makes a heavy use of Python for brain imaging analysis.
Parietal is a small research team (around 20 people) with an excellent technical knowledge of scientific and numerical computing in Python as well as a fine understanding of algorithmic issues in machine learning,
statistics and image processing. Parietal is committed to investing in the scientific Python toolstack and its members are core developers in central projects such as Mayavi and scikit-learn, as well as the nipy
library for NeuroImaging in Python and the nilearn library for machine learning applied to NeuroImaging.
Parietal is located in the Neurospin brain research facility, that hosts several brain scanners and research teams in neuroscience and medical imaging.
Practical details:
Like last year, the Parietal team was at the INRIA Winter party and it was great fun. The theme was Rock, and it did Rock!
Two weeks ago we had the winter party in the new building of INRIA Saclay. There was a laser shooting game in the second floor of the build, a cocktail bar, great food and a dance floor on the first floor. Really crazy and really fun. Certainly did not match the stereotypes of computer science research. Only a fraction of the Parietal team was there, because snow was piling up outside, blocking the roads.