Presenting Intel PhD Fellowship Program
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Key Contact
Sumeet VermaHead - Higher Education and Entrepreneurship,
Intel South Asia
Email: [email protected]
Intel® Higher Education India
Curriculum
Development
Research
Programs
Workforce
Development
Innovation and
Entrepreneurship
A dynamic innovative economy needs a robust education system that encourages graduates to pursue technical degrees and
entrepreneurial paths. Recognizing this need, Intel® Higher Education in India strives to nurture innovators through multiple
platforms. We recognize that academia plays a pivotal role in nurturing high-quality talent and skills and promoting research and
innovation. The Intel® Higher Education Program in India collaborates between Intel and leading engineering and research
institutions, universities and the government to work towards the advancement of university curricula, research engagements,
faculty developments and innovation. So far, Intel’s Higher Education program has reached over 2,35,000 students and 4,500
faculty members across more than 750 institutions.
Highlights of
the Program
• Recipients of the fellowship will work with their mentor to develop a deep understanding
of the technological issues facing the industry and stay at the forefront of solving the
most complex technological problems that lie ahead
• Recipients of the fellowship may be provided Internship opportunities at Intel
Technology India Pvt. Ltd.
• Selected PhD candidates will be awarded a fellowship of up to Rs. 6,00,000/PA including
travel grant and contingency grant for a period of 4 years
The Intel PhD Fellowship Program awards fellowships to exceptional PhD candidates pursuing cutting-edge research in “focus areas”
identified by Intel Technology India Pvt. Ltd. This is a prestigious and highly competitive program with a limited number of
fellowships awarded annually to Indian students to pursue PhD in reputed technology and research institutions in India.
The Intel PhD Fellowship Program in India
Intel® Higher Education in India
Intel PhD Fellowship Program
Stipend
Mentoring
Knowledge
Internship
Grants
Networking
Academic Research and
PhD Degree
Focus Areas
Research Area
Parallel Computing
Parallel Computing used to be the preserve of a small community interested in High Performance
Computing (HPC). But over the last few years, several important changes have taken place. One, the
increasing problems with power consumption have ended the era of ever-increasing clock frequency
and brought in the age of ever-increasing number of processor cores on a chip. Two, the low power of
multi-core chips has enabled their use in all devices including smartphones. Three, the accelerated drop
in semiconductor costs has made the “democratization” of HPC possible. Finally, data movement is
getting increasingly more expensive than computing: the so-called “memory wall”.
The research challenges in parallel computing include:
• Designing suitable architectures for various application domains
• Designing new algorithms that address the memory-wall issue and exploit the
evolving architectures
• Designing new programming paradigms and tools to enhance programmer productivity without
significantly compromising on performance and low power
Architecture
The last decade has seen a resurgence of processors incorporating architectures very different from the
aggressive out-of-order and superscalar designs. New usages, domain specific frameworks and
workloads are exploding across datacenters and devices alike. Web 2.0, Hadoop, Media Transcode,
Machine Learning, Speech Recognition are few examples. This coupled with challenges in improving
single thread performance has lead system architects to look at dedicated hardware acceleration, FPGA
offload and even programmable accelerators targeting specific domains. The dramatic increase in
programmability and the raw compute power of GPUs has resulted in yet another viable alternative for
some usage models. Orthogonally, technology advances in areas like memory (e.g. Phase Change NVM),
die stacking (e.g. through silicon Vias) and high BW interconnects (e.g. Optical) further expand the
landscape of architecture choice. However, architects today lack the ability to fully evaluate the
performance, power, complexity and cost tradeoffs involved. The choice between big or small general
purpose cores, ISA extensions, GPU offload, FPGA offload, new dedicated hardware IP integration, various
caching and memory technologies and on/off die interconnects for designs are usually made based on
time to market pressures, readily available IPs, product costs and the like. There is a critical need for the
capability to quickly pick a balance between these varied architecture options that best fit the bill for the
target usage models.
The research challenges include:
• The in-depth workload analysis with the end goal of building an architecture-independent
abstraction of the target workload domain
• A framework that can use the this abstraction to model performance, power on all the applicable
architecture options while making the right tradeoffs in modeling accuracy vs. modeling flexibility
• Extending the workload abstraction to include multiple different domains where there is a need for
one architecture to target multiple domains
Graphics
With rapid advancements in tablet, handheld and wearable, several new and disruptive usage models
leveraging ‘Visual Computing’ have emerged. The usage models are posing fresh challenges in the area of
visual computing both from a power as well as compute perspective. With the advent of retina class of
devices, there is an increasing ask towards higher pixel densities in displays. These displays consume a
significantly high amount of power (next only to RF in a smartphone) in an increasingly power constrained
envelope. On the media aspect, smartphones and tablets have long surpassed the requirement of age-
old camera/videocam technologies. There is a widespread usage of video content leading to aggressive
ask on computing in power constrained handheld devices. With the advent of better visual effects in
gaming and other visual applications, there is an increased ask on 3D graphics as well. We are fast
witnessing erstwhile desktop-class performance requirements showing up in handheld devices. These
asks have outpaced Moore’s law leading to increased effort towards increasing architectural efficiency.
Technologies such as video decode/encode, video analytics, image enhancement and 3D rendering are
being implemented in dedicated hardware (moving away from general purpose compute hardware).
While new visual quality algorithms are being implemented to cater to the demand of increased compute,
aggressive power-saving techniques such as fine grained power gating and near threshold voltage
technologies are being implemented to address the power challenge.
Sensing
The research focus will cover a broad range of sensing and sense-making technologies for cyber-physical
systems such as Internet of Things (IoT) and wearables. It will cover novel transducers, sensor-front-end
circuits, compression, feature-extraction, fusion, and classification algorithms of sensed data on devices
ranging from power-constrained wearables to cloud server farms. It will also cover power-efficient
hardware-software co-design for these algorithms. This topic can also include constrained optimization
algorithms for duty-cycling sensing devices and intelligent communication, and energy harvesting
protocols to extend battery life. It will also include dataset creation and dissemination of sensed data.
Finally, the topic can also include security and privacy issues related to the use of sensed data.
Validation
Smartphone, tablet, client and server chip solutions with customizations are exploding the validation
coverage space. Aggressive RTL tape-in to product launch timelines require validation to cover the
relevant validation space in significantly shorter time and lesser cost. Pre-silicon coverage space is
impacted by simulation, emulation speed and usage model understanding resulting in increased number
of silicon and platform collateral bugs. Key challenges for validation include different architectures, IP
integration and design for debug and validation silicon hooks impacting reuse of validation collaterals.
Validation collaterals include test, debug, platform, scope and logic analyzer which are expensive and not
reusable as
architecture changes.
The research areas include:
• Adaptive (based on test coverage) functional test generation flows for
pre-silicon/post-silicon environment
• Pushing IP/integration bugs (RTL/Firmware/SW) upstream by seamless simulation to
FPGA/Emulation flows
• Framework for use case validation from smartphone to server segments
• Self-test flows for electrical parameters in the chip for reducing validation cost
• Clock/architecture agnostic logic/electrical DFx (Debug visibility) IP
Power Management
Power management as a primary pillar in the architecture of all devices big and small has seen increasing
prominence over the last decade or so. We have already entered the era of dark silicon wherein multi-
core scaling is power limited and large areas of the chip have to be kept powered down dynamically and
efficiently to maximize performance and battery life. Modern power management straddles several
abstraction layers in computer design across circuit and microarchitecture-level aspects, multi-core and
package-level power states, and operating system interfaces and application level APIs. New technology
trends such as 3D stacked memories, arrays of special purpose accelerators, sensor networks, fully
integrated fine-grained voltage regulators, and pervasive virtualization are creating hard challenges and
exciting research opportunities for power management experts to grapple with.
Perceptual Computing
Perceptual computing will fundamentally change how people interact with their PCs, tablets, phones and
wearable devices. Advances in this field will result in intuitive, natural and engaging methods of
interacting with smart devices around us in our daily life. The aim of research in perceptual computing is
to add and build on sensory capabilities such as touch, gesture, visual understanding, motion and other
sensors to our devices and environment for creating new experiences and new user interfaces.
Important areas of focus are speech, hand and finger tracking, facial tracking/analysis, social signal
analysis and perceptual machine learning. Speech is a common and natural way to add interactivity to an
application or device in our environment. The complexities of languages, accents, ambient conditions,
etc. make this a ripe area for exploration and development of adaptive, context-sensitive algorithms for
speech recognition and speech-driven applications. Hand and finger tracking is fundamental to many
natural interaction modes. Ability to build a complex vocabulary of gestures, poses and intents is critical
to building a natural interface. Face detection and analysis is extremely useful in both interactive social
applications as well as for gaming and other communication applications. And, of course, combining the
sensory data to understand ‘social signals’ in interactions; and using machine learning to continuously
improve the context awareness.
The research challenges in perceptual computing include:
• Creating a continuous sensing and learning platform architectures
• Designing new methods of meshing multiple sensory data-streams into a more comprehensive
awareness of the context
• Design of algorithms that leverage the device, device mesh and the cloud to create seamless,
transparent, and natural human-device interaction methods
Communications
Wireless communication is an important part of mobile computing vision of Intel. Every device, starting
from phones to energy meters are going to be connected through wireless networks. This means
exponential growth in data bandwidth requirements, which necessitates development of new wireless
technologies to support 100 fold increase in data rates. To cater to these future needs, we are looking
for research in the following areas:
• WIFI and cellular integrated networks
• Heterogeneous networks
• Mm wave technologies
• Machine to machine communication and Internet of Things
• Peer-to-peer networks
Application Process
• Intel will not accept direct applications from students
• Select universities/institutes will be invited to submit a limited number of student
candidates for consideration
• Students must first be nominated by the corresponding university/institute, the application
should be routed through the research guide
• The nomination should be accompanied by a brief research proposal pertaining to the
Doctoral thesis
• A Curriculum Vitae (CV) including GPA (Bachelors, Masters, and PhD) to be submitted by the
candidate
• Students should submit up to 3 letters of recommendation of which one must be from
the students research guide
• Students should submit a cover letter to the Selection committee constituted by Intel
Technology India Pvt. Ltd. with the following information:
o Is the student willing to do an internship with Intel Technology India Pvt. Ltd. if an internship
is offered?
o Does the student have internship plans for next summer?
o Is the student’s advisor currently funded by Intel technology India Pvt. Ltd., or has he/she
been funded in the past?
o Expected date of graduation?
o Is the student working on one of the Focus Areas (see above)? Which one?
o Is the student in the general candidate pool or underrepresented?
Criteria of Selection
• Nominations from universities will be screened to ensure that the overall eligibility criteria
are met
• Selection is based on candidates’ overall potential for research excellence, degree to which
their technical interests align with the "Focus Areas", their progress till date, and
recommendations from their advisor and Head of Department
• Selection is based on the student's academic excellence and ability to clearly articulate their
research interests
• Payment of the fellowship award will be made directly to the university/institute
• Key elements for selection: Candidate’s credentials, institute’s credentials for the selected field
of study, alignment with the Focus Area and academic research guide’s credentials
Eligibility
• Nationality: Only Indian Nationals are eligible to submit applications to participate in the
Intel PhD Fellowship Program
• 1st year PhD Students and Students in the beginning of 2nd year PhD can apply
• Must be currently enrolled in a PhD program at selected universities/institutes with research problem
based on topics that are relevant to Intel (See Focus Areas in page 4-7)
• Must retain full-time student status during the academic year(s) for which the fellowship is awarded
• Must have successfully completed all qualifying examinations
• Once selected, students may not defer the fellowship
• Intel employees and their families are not eligible
Affiliations and Government Partnerships
Intel will be keen to partner with any existing Government PhD/Doctoral Studies fellowship programs for further
enrichment and expansion of the program.
Terms and Conditions
• The student should have a first class education credentials right from Higher Secondary and Secondary Schools
• 1st year PhD Students and Students in the beginning of 2nd year PhD can apply
• Students have to be registered as full-time students in the institute where the PhD registration is sought
• Intel Technology India pvt. Ltd. reserves the right not to grant any PhD Fellowship
• Intel Technology India pvt. Ltd. reserves the right to have a discussion with the student, if deemed necessary
• Intel PhD Fellowship Program is open for only the Focus Areas mentioned in page 4-7
• The institute will intimate Intel on the date of filing of any patent related to any invention by the fellow recipient
under this program
• The institute is free to publish any work developed by the fellow recipient, provided it sends Intel a written
intimation along with the work that will be published 30 days prior to such publication
• The Intel PhD fellowship can be taken in addition to the PhD scholarship that the student receives from other
sources provided there are no violation of rules
• Intel will get the first opportunity to consider the candidate for any employment opportunity, if any, within Intel
1. What is Intel PhD Fellowship Program?
The Intel PhD Fellowship Program awards fellowships to exceptional PhD candidates pursuing cutting-edge
innovation in hi-technology fields. Intel Corporation has been offering this program in the US for more than two
decades and this prestigious program has become highly competitive with a limited number of fellowships awarded
annually. We at Intel Technology India Pvt. Ltd. (Intel), are pleased to bring this program to India to encourage a high
impact transformative research collaboration between academia and industry, to provide selected students an
opportunity to work with the best minds in the selected areas of research.
2. What are the unique elements of this Program?
Each award recipient is assigned to an Intel technical mentor who is a respected leader in a said field. Students work
directly with their mentors to develop a deeper understanding of relevant technical issues and contribute to solve the
complex technical problems facing the industry. Award recipients may be considered for internships and hiring
opportunities within the company.
Through the Research grant, the award recipients work closely with their respective mentors, meet and network with
top industry researchers at selected Intel campuses during the academic year immediately following the award. The
goal of these sessions are to provide each student with an opportunity to showcase their research, identify potential
industry-academic collaborations, and explore internship opportunities.
3. Can Students directly apply to Intel for PhD Fellowship Program?
No. Students cannot directly apply for the Intel PhD Fellowship Program. Intel will be inviting proposals from faculty
members of select technology institutions and applications are to be routed through the research guides.
4. When is the last date for submission of application forms? When will the results be declared?
Please check with an Intel Representative for detailed information on form submission and results declaration.
5. Can a Professor / Research guide apply for the Intel PhD Fellowship before identifying a student
for PhD?
Yes. A Professor / Research Guide from an institution selected by Intel for the Intel PhD Fellowship program can
submit a proposal without a student being identified. However, the research guide has to provide the details of the
student at a later date to Intel. The review committee will once again review the proposal, based on the details of the
student’s educational qualifications and other credentials as per the terms and conditions of the Intel PhD fellowship
program, and make a decision on awarding the fellowship.
6. Are award recipients guaranteed a job in Intel?
No, the Intel PhD fellowship program will not guarantee a job at Intel to the award recipients. However, Intel may give
hiring preference to the award recipients if they chose to pursue their career with Intel.
7. Will Intel do a performance review of the Fellowship? How frequently?
Each award recipient shall be associated with a mentor from Intel who is an established researcher in a given domain.
The student shall be in touch with the Intel mentor on a regular basis during the tenure of the Fellowship.
Additionally, the candidate has to submit an annual progress report to the PhD Fellowship Committee for review.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
Notes
8. Will Intel mentors be co-authors of research papers arising from the research through
Fellowships?
Yes, Intel Mentors can be co-authors to research papers at their discretion. As the focus of the Fellowship is to
encourage outstanding technical research, Intel will aim to publish the research papers in renowned publications and
conferences.
9. What will happen if an award recipient gets a better job offer and would like to discontinue the
Fellowship
It is not binding on the student to continue with the Fellowship. A student can apply for discontinuation of the
Fellowship by providing strong reasons justifying the same, recommendation and support of the research guide for the
discontinuation and sufficient notice period before the Fellowship can be terminated.
10. What are the key elements for selection of a candidate?
The key selection criteria include:
a) Academic credentials of the students
b) Proven track record and expertise of the research guide in the area / domain
c) Engineering and research goals
d) Relevance of research topic
11. Can the Research Area and Guide be changed at a later date?
Yes. On the basis of adequate justification, the student’s research area and/ or research guide can be changed.
However, continuation of the fellowship will be subjected to further review by the Intel PhD Fellowship Committee
12. Can the scholarship be taken in addition to other scholarships that the student is receiving?
Yes. The Intel PhD Fellowship can be taken in addition to other scholarships, provided the Institutes’ own PhD program
rules and regulations permits it and the terms and conditions of the scholarship from other sources are not violated.
13. How do I send in my applications for the Intel PhD fellowship program?
Applications for the scheme should be routed through the research guide in the format provided by Intel with a
covering letter from the research guide. The application form duly completed with necessary support documents
should be emailed in PDF format to Intel
14. To whom should the applications be sent?
Applications should be sent by email to Ms. Naheed Hazarika at [email protected].
Notes Notes