UCL Engineering Doctorate Centre in Virtual Environments, Imaging and Visualisation

The
Engineering Doctorate Centre in Virtual Environments, Imaging and Visualisation
(EngD VEIV) was founded in 2001 at University College London in the Department of
Computer Science and the Bartlett School of Architecture. It has recently won funding
for 50 funded places over the next five years. The EngD VEIV funds and supports
research engineers (REs) studying in areas related to the use of visualisation and
imaging in engineering.

The three or four year EngD programme
is targeted at leading students and engineers who want to lead research in industry,
or want to maintain significant links with industry in an academic career. Every
RE has a sponsoring company, and normally the RE will work significant proportions
of their time at the company. Uniquely, it is possible to do an EngD in two modes:
as a student who is placed with a company, or as a secondee from an existing position
in a company. This makes a doctoral degree much more accessible for senior engineers
with established careers and positions. The taught programme covers a broad range
of topics, from basic engineering skills (design process, software engineering)
through to business development courses. At UCL, REs have the opportunity to take
courses at the London Business School.
The background of our REs range from recent graduates, through qualified architects
to engineers with significant career experience. The REs come are sponsored by a
wide variety companies from SMEs through to large PLCs. Sponsors include BAA Systems,
BBC, Body Metrics Ltd, British Teleco,, Buro Happold, Electronic Arts, Foster +
Partners, Framestore CFC, Ordnance Survey, Philips and Sharp.
An idea of the range and quality of work of our recent REs is given by three short
vignettes:
Bernard Spanlang, who graduated in 2005,
worked with the spin-out company BodyMetrics to develop clothing animation and visualization
software. Aside from four papers, he is co-author of two patents. With developers
from BodyMetrics, he assembled a scanning and visualization system for women's jeans
that would automatically take measurements of customers and recommend sizing choices.
This system is installed in Selfridges on Oxford Street, London and at Harrods in
Knightsbridge, London.
Siavash Haroun-Mahdavi and Sean Hanna together
developed technologies to evolve three-dimensional structures for materials. An
initial demonstration of a visualisation and subsequent stereo-lithographic production
of a weight-bearing structure as part of a group project led to research that lead
to a spin-out company (ComplexMatters).
Simon Pilgrim was one of two students recruited by Electronic Arts,
UK in 2003. At the time, EA was faced with developing technology that would support
its transition to the next-generation of consoles (the generation that hit the shelves
in time for Christmas 2006). Simon's research has formed the central part of a growing
strategic relationship between UCL and EA, which has led to joint publicity, student
projects and a clearer vision of shared research and development.
The EngD VEIV programme has funding from the EPSRC for ten places each year. We
accept applications to start at any time of the year.
Applicants must be from the UK or EU and must satisfy the standard EPSRC residency
rules. Each RE in studentship mode receives a tax-free stipend of at least £18,000.
The companies sponsoring REs in secondment mode can receive a subsidy towards the
RE's salary.
How to Apply
Applications are invited now for entry into the programme. No set deadline is given
for applications, as an Engineering Doctorate can start at any time of the year.