Development
b. Entrepreneurship and Start-ups
c. Blue Economy
d. Natural Resources and Regional Development
e. Sustainable Livelihood
f. Green Economy Transition
g. Fintech and Fintech-based Solutions for
Economic Development
h. Cooperatives and Rural Transformation
i. Emerging Technologies and Socio-economic Development
2.
Management
a. Financial Management
b. Human Resource Management
3.
Commerce
a. Trade and Commerce
b. Rural and Urban Tourism
c. Fintech and Fintech-based Trade and Commerce
4.
Sociology/Social Work
a. Artificial Intelligence: Social Impact
b. Development and Empowerment of Vulnerable Sections of Society
c. Sociology of Family in India
d. Food and Society
5.
Social Anthropology
a. Linguistic Anthropology
b. Cultural Anthropology
c. Ethnographic Studies
6.
Culture Studies
a. Digital Humanities
b. Life, Literature and Thought in India
c. Literature and Globalization
d. Art Practices and Folk/Oral Forms
7.
Sanskrit Studies
a. Grammatical Tradition
b. Manuscript Studies
c. Poetics
d. Literary Traditions
8.
Socio-Philosophical Studies
a. Indian Philosophical Systems
b. Comparative Ethics
c. Artificial Intelligence and Ethics
9.
Sociolinguistics
a. Language, Culture and Society
b. Social Concepts and Theories in Indian Languages
10.
Gender Studies
a. Women-Led Development
b. Gender and Society
11.
Health Studies
a. AYUSH Community Medicine
b. Indigenous Healing Methods and Practices
c. Health of Women
d. Food and Nutrition of Children
e. ‘Zero-Food’ Children : Socio-economic and Environmental Aspects
f. Sports and Fitness
12.
Political Science
a. E-Governance
b. G20 Declaration and Global Sustainability
c. Human Rights and Legislation
d. Contemporary Electoral System
e. People’s Participation in Politics
f. Politics and Technology
g. Indian Political Thought
h. Indigenous Polity
i. Rural and Urban Governance
j. Indian Constitutionalism
13.
International Relations/ Geopolitics
a. Geo Politics
b. Indo-Pacific Strategic Relations
c. India’s Cultural Diplomacy and Soft Power
14.
Public Administration
a. Ethical Governance
b. Tribunals, Commissions and Bureaucratic System
15.
Diaspora Studies
a. Role of Indian Diaspora in the Development of Bharat
b. Multiculturalism
16.
National Security and Strategic Studies
a. Defence and National Security
b. Defence Manufacturing
17.
Education and Skilling
a. Digital Learning Technology Integration
b. National Education Policy: Implementation and Challenges
c. Ethics, Values and Innovation in Education
d. Artificial Intelligence and Education
e. Skilling Youth for Future Jobs
f. Skill Education in HEIs
18.
Social Psychology
a. Mental Health Social Inclusion
b. Social Dimensions of Indian Psychology
19.
Legal Studies
a. Legal and Para-legal Studies
b. Legal History of India
20.
Social and Human Geography
a. Demography
b. Migration
c. Human Resource and Holistic Growth
d. Regional Geography
e. Rural and Urban Landscape
21.
Environmental Studies
a. Human-Environment Relationship
b. Climate Change
c. Sustainable Development Goals in Indian Context
d. Renewable Energy Resources
22.
Modern Social History
a. History and Heritage
b. Memory and History
c. Maritime History
23.
Media Studies
a. Mass Media and its Socio-Cultural Impact
b. Mass Media and Society in India
24.
Library Science
a. Bibliometric/ Scientometric/ Webometric Studies
b. E-Resources and IT Application
c. Metadata Harvesting Techniques and Digital Repository
25.
Language Studies
a. Knowledge Traditions in Indian Languages
b. Application of Knowledge Contained in the Vernacular Texts
26.
Indian Knowledge Systems
a. Indian Textual and Oral Traditions
b. Indigenous Innovation, Technology and Development
c. Development of Pedagogical Materials in Diverse
Disciplinary/Inter-disciplinary Areas based on Indian Intellectual Texts
27.
Rural Studies
a. Rural Economy
b. Rural Society
c. Rural-Urban Migration
d. Rural Culture its Signifiers
28.
Studies
a. Intersectional /Multidisciplinary Studies on
b. Policy Research for
c. Rehabilitation, Innovation Technology for
d. Financial Empowerment of
Research Proposals that span across disciplinary boundaries also fall within the areas of the Council’s interest. Preference will be given to PhD Students pursuing research in the priority areas of the ICSSR.
2. Eligibility
A) Full-Term Doctoral Fellowship
2.1 Doctoral Fellow should be a full-time bonafide Ph.D. student at the affiliating university/ institution throughout the duration of fellowship tenure.
2.2 The candidate must have a confirmed Ph.D. registration at any of the institutions mentioned in para 1.2 in line with the UGC norms in force. The Ph.D. topic must have been confirmed by the DRC/authorised statutory body of the institution on or before the last date of call for applications. Application submitted by those scholars whose research proposals and topics have not been approved by the statutory bodies of their respective institutions will be summarily rejected.
2.3 The candidate must not be more than 40 years of age on the last date of application. There shall be an age relaxation of 5 years for SC/ST/OBC-(NCL) candidates Persons with benchmark Disability (PwD).
2.4 The candidate must have secured a minimum of 55% marks in Post-Graduation or equivalent grades in any social science discipline. Five per cent (5%) relaxation of marks will be given to SC/ST/ OBC-(NCL) candidates Persons with benchmark Disability (PwD). The submission of scanned copy of mark sheet of Post-Graduation is mandatory for submission of online application. In case, the candidates do not upload the documents, their candidature will be summarily rejected
2.5. The criteria of NET for applying for ICSSR Doctoral Fellowship Schemes will be as under:
i. 95 percent of the total fellowships shall be awarded to NET qualified applicants
ii. A maximum of 5 per cent of the fellowships shall be awarded to candidates who are not NET qualified but their proposals are found outstanding in the evaluation of the ICSSR’s panel of subject experts.
2.6. Candidates who have already availed UGC Junior Research Fellowship (JRF) / Rajiv Gandhi National Fellowship (RGNF) / Maulana Azad National Fellowship (MANF) / ICSSR / ICAR / CSIR / ICPR / ICMR / ICHR / Jawaharlal Nehru Memorial Foundation Fund Fellowship (JNMF) or any such major doctoral fellowship are not eligible to apply. Candidates drawing UGC Non-NET Fellowship are eligible to apply.
B) Institutional Full-Term Doctoral Fellowship
2.7. Candidates applying under Institutional Doctoral Fellowship Scheme shall not be eligible to apply for Centrally-Administered Doctoral Fellowship schemes.
2.8. All the conditions of the Full-Term Doctoral Fellowship (2.1 to 2.6) shall apply to this category also and the fellowship shall be administered through the ICSSR Research Institutes.
C) Short-Term Fellowship
2.8. All the conditions of the Full-Term Doctoral Fellowship (2.1 to 2.6) shall apply. In addition, the candidate should have completed at least three years of research work for Ph.D degree at any of the institutions mentioned in para1.1.
D) Contingency Grant
2.9. Under this scheme, a one-time grant is awarded to Ph.D scholars registered at any of the institutions mentioned in para1.1, who are at an advanced stage of their research work. The candidates meeting all conditions of the Full-Term Doctoral Fellowship (2.1 to 2.6) are eligible to apply for Contingency Grant for the purposes of field trip, stationery and computer consumable related expenses.
3. How to Apply
3.1. Applicants must submit an online application in prescribed format and upload scanned copies of the annexures on ICSSR website.
3.2 (A) Self-attested copies of educational qualification and proof of date of birth must be annexed with the hard copy of the application form. The candidate has to mandatorily provide an attested copy of research proposal submitted by the candidate in the institution where he/ she is registered for PhD. The copy of research proposal must be attested by the concerned HoD/Dean. The topic mentioned in the proposal must have been confirmed by the DRC/authorised statutory body of the institution on or before the last date of call for applications and a certificate to this effect must be uploaded during submission of online application and the attested copy must be annexed with the hard copy of the application form.
3.2 (B) Applicants are also required to submit the hard copies of their application and annexures, duly forwarded by the Competent Authorities of the affiliating university/college/institute, within the stipulated time mentioned in the call for applications. The forwarding letters and undertakings must be submitted in original along with the hard copy of the application form.
3.3 The Research Proposal should be either in English or Hindi. Arial/Mangal Unicode font will be used in Devanagari script to fill application form in Hindi.
B.) Institutional Full-Term Doctoral Fellowship
3.4 Applicants seeking Institutional Doctoral Fellowship must submit an online application in prescribed format along with the annexures as mentioned in para 3.2 (A) on ICSSR website only. The hardcopy of applications must however be forwarded by the respective ICSSR Research Institutes. The ICSSR will prepare the merit list of successful candidates and the same will be intimated to the concerned research institutes.
3.5 The ICSSR Research Institutes will intimate the same to the candidates and follow the guidelines of the ICSSR regarding disbursal of fellowships, which will be made available to them after declaration of result.
C) Short-Term Doctoral Fellowship
3.6 The application procedure for the scheme shall be the same as per the conditions mentioned in Clauses 3.1 to 3.4.
3.7 The application procedure for the scheme shall be the same as per the conditions mentioned in Clauses 3.1 to 3.4.
4. Procedure for Award of Fellowships
4.1. The fellowships shall be awarded on the basis of evaluation of applications by the panel of subject experts. Based on the evaluation reports of the Expert Committee(s), merit lists shall be prepared for award of fellowships.
4.2. The reservation policy of the Government of India for SC, ST, OBC(NCL), EWS and Persons with Benchmark Disability (PwD) will be duly followed in the award of fellowships.
4.3 In case ICSSR feels the need, it may invite any short-listed applicant for presentation before an Expert Committee of ICSSR.
4.5 The merit list of selected candidates of Doctoral Fellowships will be placed on the ICSSR website.
4.6 Only the selected candidates and their affiliating universities shall be informed individually through a provisional award letter clearly specifying the formalities and documents required for joining the fellowship.
5. Duration and Value:
5.1 The value of Full-Term Doctoral Fellowship is Rs 20,000 per month plus Rs 20,000 contingency grant per annum. The total duration of the Full-term Doctoral Fellowship shall be two years. The first award letter will be initially for a period of one year effective from the date of issue of award letter. 5.2 The value and duration of fellowship will be in line with the directives of the Ministry of Education issued from time to time.
5.3 The duration and value of fellowship will be the same as mentioned under the Full-Term Doctoral Fellowship. (5.1 to 5.2)
5.4 The duration of the Short-Term Doctoral Fellowship is strictly for six months or till the date of Ph.D. submission at the university/ institution, whichever is earlier.
5.5 The value of fellowship will be equivalent to six month fellowship amount of the Full-Term Doctoral Fellowship grant plus contingency grant payable for six months.
5.6 The value of fellowship is a consolidated grant of Rs 62500/.
6. Joining and Release of Fellowship
6.1 The scholar must join the fellowship within the time stipulated by the ICSSR in the provisional award letter.
6.2 The fellowship instalments will be released on yearly basis.
6.3 The sanction of the fellowship will be issued initially for a period of one year, effective from the date of issue of award letter. The renewal of the Fellowship for the subsequent years shall be subject to the receipt of satisfactory Annual Progress Report and Statement of Expenditure for the entire fellowship grant released for first year.
6.4 The first instalment will be released after receiving the documents prescribed in the Award letter along with the Grant-in-aid-Bill (GIB) and Registration Mandate Form of PFMS Account of those affiliating / administering institutions, which have not linked their accounts to PFMS for ICSSR grant.
6.5 (i) The instalment of second year will be released only after the approval of extension of fellowship for the second year by the Council subject to the receipt of satisfactory Progress Reports and Statement of Expenditure for the entire fellowship grant released for first year and receipt of the Grant-in-Aid Bill (GIB).
6.5 (ii) The final year fellowship grant will be released in two instalments.
6.5 (iii) The final instalment will be released subject to receipt of appropriate documents such as the Thesis Submission Certificate issued by the Controller of Examination/Competent Authority of the University, soft copy of the PhD thesis, a summary in 3000 to 4000 words along with the audited Statement of Accounts and Utilization Certificate for the admissible grant (in GFR 12A Form).
6.6 The Statement of Accounts and Utilization certificate should be signed by the Finance Officer / Registrar / Principal / Director in case the accounts of the institution are audited by the CAG/AG. Otherwise, they need to be signed both by the competent authority of the affiliating institution along with the chartered accountant.
6.7 The requisite documents at every stage should be submitted within the prescribed time frame.
6.8 Same as mentioned under the Full-Term Doctoral Fellowship (para 6.1 to 6.7).
6.9 The Short-Term Fellowship will be released in two instalments. The first instalment amounting to 70% of the total grant will be released on receipt of the documents prescribed in the Award letter along with the grant-in-aid bill (GIB) and Registration Mandate Form of PFMS account of concerned affiliating / administering institution. The second and final instalment of the admissible grant shall be released after receiving a Thesis Submission Certificate issued by the Controller of Examination/Competent Authority of the University, soft copy of PhD thesis, a summary in 3000 to 4000 words along with the audited Statement of Accounts with Utilization Certificate (in GFR-12A Form) for the admissible amount duly signed by the competent authority of the affiliating institution.
6.10 The Statement of Accounts and Utilization Certificate will be signed by the Finance Officer / Registrar / Director in case the accounts of the Institution are audited by the CAG/AG. Otherwise, they need to be signed by the competent authority of the affiliating institution along with a chartered accountant.
6.11 The Contingency Grant will be released in two instalments. The first instalment amounting to Rs 40,000/- will be released on receipt of the documents prescribed in the Award letter along with the grant-in-aid bill (GIB) and Registration Mandate Form of PFMS Account of concerned affiliating / administering institution. The second and final instalment of the admissible grant shall be released after receiving a Thesis Submission Certificate issued by the Controller of Examination/Competent Authority of the University, a summary in 3000 to 4000 words along with the audited Statement of Accounts with Utilization Certificate (in GFR-12A Form) for the admissible amount duly signed by the competent authority of the affiliating institution.
6.12 The Statement of Accounts and Utilization Certificate will be signed by the Finance Officer / Registrar / Director in case the accounts of the Institution are audited by the CAG/AG. Otherwise, they need to be signed by the competent authority of the affiliating institution along with a chartered accountant.
7. Monitoring of Fellowships
7.1 Regular monitoring of Fellowship is done on the basis of Six Monthly and Annual Progress Reports in the prescribed format submitted by the scholar and duly forwarded by the supervisor.
7.2 The fellowship may be discontinued / terminated at any stage if research progress is found to be unsatisfactory or any ICSSR rules are violated or the research topic is changed without the permission of ICSSR.
7.3 The ICSSR may ask for annual presentation / mid-term appraisal of the research work.
7.4 In cases of delayed Progress Reports, the scholar will be required to give the justification of the delay on which the final decision shall be taken by ICSSR. The scholar may be asked to furnish an Undertaking specifying the date of Ph.D. submission to ICSSR.
7.5 During the course of the Phd, the scholars are required to publish at least two research papers in peer-reviewed journals on the theme of the research undertaken and submit a copy of the same to the ICSSR.
7.6 The scholars must acknowledge the ICSSR while getting their research papers published. The ICSSR must also be compulsorily acknowledged in the PhD thesis.
8. Completion of the Fellowship
8.1 If a fellow leaves the fellowship before the completion of fellowship duration, he/she has to inform ICSSR in advance.
8.1.1 No scholar will be allowed to leave the fellowship under clause 8.1 before completion of three months of fellowship period. If the scholar leaves it within three months, he/she will have to refund the already disbursed fellowship amount in full to the ICSSR.
8.1.2 The scholar shall be permitted to retain the grant released from date of Joining till the date of leaving / discontinuing the ICSSR fellowship subject to submission of the following:
(i) An updated Progress Report for the said period duly forwarded by the Supervisor.
(ii) An Undertaking to submit a Thesis Submission Certificate and soft copy of PhD thesis within a month of submission of thesis in affiliating/ administering institution on a Non-Judicial stamp paper of Rs. 100/- (in prescribed format).
(iii) Statement of Accounts and Utilization Certificate (in GFR-12 A form) for the admissible amount.
(iv) Refund of the unspent balance, if any. The payment may be made by sending a cheque/ DD in favour of ICSSR, New Delhi or through PFMS /RTGS.
8.1.3 In such cases, the ICSSR may consider to pay contingency grant subsequent to submission of thesis to ICSSR. In other cases, the scholar can leave the fellowship by refunding the entire amount already released by the ICSSR.
8.1.4 The scholars leaving the fellowship before completion of their fellowship tenure without informing ICSSR shall be required to refund the entire amount of fellowship released with penalty/penal interest.
8.2 The fellows are required to submit a Ph D Thesis Submission Certificate issued by the Controller of Examinations/Competent Authority and soft copy of the thesis preferably within a month of submission of the Ph D Thesis to the affiliating/ administering institution for award of the Ph D Degree, failing which the fellow has to refund the amount of fellowship to the ICSSR.
8.3 If, as a special case, a scholar remains on leave due to maternity / medical / extra ordinary circumstances (not exceeding six months) with due approval by the ICSSR, the tenure of fellowship shall be deferred by that period but the total amount of fellowship sanctioned shall not exceed the fellowship duration mentioned in the award letter.
8.4 Again, as a special case, a scholar can avail a foreign fellowship and re-join ICSSR Fellowship on return with due approval by the ICSSR, the tenure of fellowship may be deferred by that period but the total amount of fellowship sanctioned shall not exceed the fellowship duration mentioned in the award letter.
8.5 There will be no extension if the scholar deregisters from PhD and re-registers to submit the thesis after a gap. The date of deregistration will be the date of termination of fellowship.
8.6 After the thesis is submitted to the concerned university, the scholar must submit the following to ICSSR at the earliest preferably within a month to settle the accounts
(i) A PhD Thesis Submission Certificate issued by the Controller of Examinations/Competent Authority immediately after submission of the Ph D Thesis to the University for award of the Ph D Degree along with a copy of summary (in 3000 to 4000 words) and research papers published. A softcopy of the Thesis has to be sent along with the above.
(ii) The audited Statement of Account and Utilization Certificate (in GFR-12A Form) for the admissible grant as per clause 6.5 and 6.9.
8.7 As a policy, ICSSR does not accept contents beyond 10 percent on Similarity Index. Scholars are required to get their final report checked from their affiliating institutions for Similarity Index and attach the plagiarism report at the time of submission of soft copy of thesis to the ICSSR.
8.8 Same as mentioned under the Full-Term Doctoral Fellowship including the conditions mentioned in the Clauses 8.1 to 8.7. Further, the concerned research institute must submit the Thesis Submission Certificate and other prescribed documents to ICSSR well in time.
8.9 Same as mentioned under the Full-Term Doctoral Fellowship including the conditions mentioned in the Clauses 8.1 to 8.7.
8.10 Same as mentioned under the Full-Term Doctoral Fellowship including the conditions mentioned in the Clauses 8.2. 8.6 and 8.7.
9. Expectation from the Affiliating Institution
9.1 The affiliating institution is required to provide the requisite research infrastructure to the scholar and maintain proper accounts.
9.2 The affiliating institution is required to give a Forwarding letter in the prescribed format contained in the Application Form to administer and manage the ICSSR fellowship grant.
9.3 The affiliating institution shall open / maintain a dedicated bank account for ICSSR grant (Scheme Code 0877) that is duly registered at PFMS portal for release of the Doctoral Fellowship Grant without any delay.
9.4 The affiliating institution is expected to immediately release the sanctioned fellowship grant released by ICSSR to the scholar.
9.5 The affiliating institution is expected to ensure a Thesis Submission Certificate and audited Statement of Accounts and Utilization Certificate with respect to admissible grant, (in the prescribed GFR- 12A) duly certified by the Competent authority including the refund of any unspent balance within one year.
9.6 In case a scholar leaves / discontinues his fellowship before completion of fellowship tenure, the affiliating institution shall inform ICSSR within 15 days and settle the accounts including the refund of any unspent balance within three months.
10. Other Conditions
10.1 The ICSSR will follow the ceiling imposed by the UGC on number of doctoral supervisions under a particular category of guide (Professor/Associate Professor/Assistant Professor).
10.2 The Doctoral Fellows must stay and work full time at the affiliating university / institute. However, they may go on field work with approval of their supervisor. For the rest of the research period, they must continue to work at the concerned university / institute and follow their rules.
10.3 The Fellow shall not accept or hold any appointment (paid or otherwise) or receive any emoluments, salary, stipend etc., from any other source during the tenure of the award of fellowship. However, a fellow may undertake teaching assignments of not more than six hours a week.
10.4 The tenure of Full-Term Doctoral Fellowship is strictly for duration decided by the Ministry of Education, Govt. of India. Any extension will be granted under exceptional circumstances without any additional financial implications to the ICSSR. The total duration of fellowship will remain unchanged under all circumstances.
10.5 The contingency grant may be utilized for books, stationery, computer consumable costs and field work expenses related to the research work.
10.6 The ICSSR reserves the first right to publish the Ph.D thesis funded by it, provided the work is recommended for publication by the ICSSR expert(s).
10.7 Defaulters of any previous ICSSR fellowship / project / grant will not be eligible for consideration until the applicant obtains the clearance from the concerned administrative division.
10.8 A fellow is not entitled for same type of fellowship more than once.
10.9 While accepting Doctoral fellowships from the ICSSR, a fellow should not accept job or any other fellowship from any other university / institute. However, ICSSR shall encourage and support the ICSSR fellowship awardees getting prestigious foreign fellowships. Therefore, they shall be permitted to re-join their fellowships after their return from abroad as special cases, provided they had sought prior approvals.
10.10 During the tenure of fellowship, the fellow will be governed by the rules of the affiliating/ administering institution in all matters including drawls of TA, attendance, holidays/leave and contingency grant, etc.
10.11 The selected fellows are expected to do full-time research in India. They can, however, undertake data collection outside India, if warranted by the needs of the proposal. For this, they are required to apply separately for consideration under the Data Collection Scheme of the International Collaboration Division of ICSSR. However, ICSSR will not be bound to support such data collection from abroad and the decision of the ICSSR will be final. In either case, the completion of study should not be consequent upon such data collection support.
10.12 The scholar should not have been subjected to any disciplinary / legal action / proceedings/ financial penalties in his/her research career.
10.13 Application submitted against a Call will not be considered for the subsequent Calls on its own.
10.14 ICSSR reserves the right to reject any application without assigning any reason. It is also not responsible for any postal delay / loss.
10.15 Incomplete applications shall not be considered for fellowship.
10.16 No queries regarding the awards will be entertained by the ICSSR secretariat until the final declaration of results, which will be placed on ICSSR website.
10.17 The final authority for the interpretation of the guidelines or any such issue is vested with the ICSSR.
The internationally renowned Institutions in technical education, the Indian Institutes of Technology (IITs) are inviting scholars from ASEAN countries to apply for PhD fellowships to strengthen the deep and historical relations between India and ASEAN.
The institution thrives for its quality education and strict selection criteria. When selected, you will be able to complete your Ph.D. with funding from the Government of India. The funding includes a monthly stipend and an annual research grant for up to 5 years of their Ph.D. program.
On 25th January 2018, at the 25th anniversary of the ASEAN-India Commemorative Summit in New Delhi, the Prime Minister of India Shri Narendra Modi, in the presence of the leaders of all 10 ASEAN countries announced the Doctoral fellowship in India for ASEAN. Under this Programme, 1000 fellowships will be provided to ASEAN citizens to pursue an integrated Ph.D. at the prestigious Indian Institute of Technology of their choice.
The programme covers ten ASEAN countries exclusively.
IITs support cutting-edge research in science and technology.
India has a strong focus on science and technology with vast research and development infrastructure. It’s the third-largest scientific and technical manpower pool with many world-class, internationally ranked universities awarding more than 40,000 doctorates annually. A nation of immense diversity which is reflected in its rich culture and heritage.
Here are a few reasons to consider doing PhD in India (at IITs)
Research opportunities in textile engineering at iits.
What is Textile and Fibre Engineering Textile is an umbrella
Energy Science and Engineering The energy area focuses on
Overview The Department of Humanities & Social Science
Overview The Department of Management Studies at various I
(Selected candidates will receive the offer letters from their respective IITs.)
The selected candidates can contact their respective IITs for further assistance. See “Contact Us” for the same.
Applicants may apply online at https://ecampus.iitd.ac.in/ASEAN/login on our portal.
Satisfying the eligibility criteria guarantees neither interview nor admission. For additional eligibility criteria, please check the individual IIT’s preview page under the “ Explore IITs ” tab.
The maximum term for each fellowship is of 5 years
You will receive a monthly stipend - INR 31,000/- for the first two years, INR 35,000/- for the next three years
Study grant up to INR 170,000/- is provided for research expenses such as travel, books, contingency expenses
Frequently Asked Questions
Where will the fellowships be hosted, how do i avail of the fellowship, when will the application be launched, how much funding is provided as part of the fellowship, and for how long, what does the fellowship include, do we have separate hostels for international students, do i need to pay for my hostel fees, what visa do i need to apply for, what are the visa fees, will my airfare be reimbursed if i come to india, when will i get my fellowship amount, in case my classes start online, will i get the stipend in my account, subscribe to our newsletter.
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Apply for a PhD at IITs — the best technology institutions of India
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BITS Pilani is a Deemed to be University, offering on-campus programs to more than 18,500 students across its campuses in Pilani, Goa, Hyderabad, Mumbai and Dubai.It has been recognized as an Institute of Eminence by the Ministry of Education, Government of India in 2020.
QS World University Subject Rankings 2024 has ranked BITS Pilani globally at
In ǪS Asia University Rankings 2024, BITS has been ranked 215th in Asia and at 22nd in India. Further, BITS Pilani has been ranked among the top 300 in ǪS World University Graduate Employability Rankings 2022 and within top 6 in India.
Having pioneered several curricular and pedagogic attributes, BITS Pilani has a vision to be amongst the top research-led Institutes in the country. The qualities of innovation, enterprise, commitment to excellence, adherence to merit, and transparency, have characterized the Institute during its inexorable march to eminence.
The Institute has secured over Rs 398 crores as external research funding in the last 5 years. State of the art facilities have been developed to support cutting edge research, led by students and about 930 faculty members, leading to a Scopus h-index of 156, with 221 patents filed so far, and 41 patents granted. Currently, there are 14 BITSian Unicorns and 1 Decacorn. There are over 7500 BITSian founders and co-founders of enterprises.
Doctoral Programme (Ph.D.)
Admissions portal open 01st march 2024.
Please click here for more information.
List of Candidates shortlisted for Ph.D. Admission Test and/or Interview is now available.
Department preference with regard to the full-time and part-time Ph.D student admission is given in the table below.
Department Preference for Ph.D. Admission(Second Sem. 2022-23) | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Department | Pilani | Goa | Hyderabad | |||
Full Time | Part Time | Full Time | Part Time | Full Time | Part Time | |
Biological Science | ||||||
Chemical Engineering | ||||||
Chemistry | ||||||
Civil Engineering | ||||||
Computer Science & Information Systems | ||||||
Electrical & Electronics Engineering | ||||||
Humanities & Social Sciences | ||||||
Economics & Finance | ||||||
Management | ||||||
Mathematics | ||||||
Mechanical Engineering | ||||||
Pharmacy | ||||||
Physics |
Yes – A Department intends to admit students under the specified mode. No – A Department does not intend to admit students under the specified mode.
Minimum Eligibility Qualifications
ME / MTech / MPharm / MBA / MPhil (minimum of 60% aggregate)* MSc/BE/BPharm or an equivalent degree (minimum of 60% aggregate)* For admission into Humanities and Social Sciences, MA degree (minimum of 55% aggregate)* For part-time applicants, a minimum of one-year experience in the related field of study is required
[*In the Qualifying Degree examination]
In addition, Departments may set specific admission criteria for shortlisting. Meeting the minimum eligibility qualifications does not guarantee admission into the PhD program. Shortlisted candidates will have to appear for an admission test, which may comprise a written exam and/or interview. Information on specific Departments and related research activities is available on the Department homepage of respective campuses.
Full-time students
Preferably individuals who would like to pursue PhD in-house, residing on campus.
Part-time students
Preferably individuals who are working in organizations providing basic facilities and an environment for research.
Financial Assistance
Full-time PhD students admitted into the PhD program are eligible to be considered for an Institute fellowship of Rs. 34,000 or Rs. 37,000 per month in the first year based on their qualifications at the time of admission. Students admitted with M.E./M.Tech./M.Pharm./MBA/M.Phil. or an equivalent Degree are eligible to receive an Institute fellowship of Rs. 37,000/-. Students admitted with M.Sc./B.E./B.Pharm. or an equivalent degree are eligible to receive an Institute fellowship of Rs. 34,000/-. These students on successful completion of coursework will receive Rs. 37,000/- from the Semester following the one in which the course work was completed Higher fellowship may be made available in subsequent years. Consideration for Institute fellowship will be as per Institute norms. It will be obligatory on the part of every admitted full time student to undertake 8 hours (per week) of work as assigned to him/her by the institute.
Activity | Date |
---|---|
Admission Portal Open | 01-March-2024 |
Last date for submission of application | 29-April-2024 |
Declaration of shortlisted candidates for written test and interview | 06-May-2024 |
Written test and/or interview date (at a BITS Pilani campus) | To be Announced |
Announcement of admission offers | To be Announced |
Last date for fee payment | To be Announced |
Reporting at the BITS Pilani campus | 25-July-2024 |
Orientation | 26, 27-July-2024 |
Course registration | 01-August-2024 |
Beginning of classwork | 02-August-2024 |
The Institute reserves the right to change the above deadlines. Candidates will be informed in advance should there be such a change.
Pilani campus – biological sciences, pilani campus – chemistry, pilani campus – chemical engineering, pilani campus – civil engineering, pilani campus – electrical & electronics engineering, pilani campus – humanities and social sciences, pilani campus – physics, pilani campus – mechanical engineering, goa campus – biological sciences, goa campus – chemistry, goa campus – computer sciences, goa campus – electrical & electronics engineering, goa campus – humanities and social sciences, goa campus – mathematics, goa campus – mechanical engineering, hyderabad campus – biological sciences, hyderabad campus – chemical engineering, hyderabad campus – chemistry, hyderabad campus – civil engineering, hyderabad campus – computer sciences, hyderabad campus – electrical & electronics engineering, hyderabad campus – humanities and social sciences, hyderabad campus – mathematics, hyderabad campus – mechanical engineering, hyderabad campus – pharmacy, top resources.
Admissions office.
Birla Institute of Technology & Science, Pilani Campus, Pilani, Rajasthan 333031 (INDIA).
(Note : For any query you may contact through the above phone numbers on any working day from Office Hours : Monday to Friday 9AM - 1PM & 2PM - 5PM Saturday 9AM - 1PM)
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Requirements for institute assistantship/ external fellowship (only for regular & full time category candidates), institute assistantships/ external fellowships:.
The Institute Assistantships/ External Fellowships (such as CSIR/ UGC/ NBHM, etc.) are available only to the students who are admitted under Regular & Full Time Category into PhD programmes.
Institute assistantships will be available to eligible students as per prevailing (MoE, GOI) norms, as applicable from time to time. The present rates of Institute Assistantships are as below:
First Two Years | Rs.31,000/- |
For Subsequent Three Years | Rs.35,000/- |
All Regular and Full Time Category Candidates must satisfy one of the following requirements (unless they are exempted) in addition to satisfying Eligibility Requirements related to Qualifying Degree.
A Regular and Full Time Category Candidate satisfying one of the following requirements is exempted from the requirement of valid GATE/ CEED/ NET/ INSPIRE, etc.:
©2021 Indian Institute of Technology Guwahati
Previous years:, algorithms, optimizations and markets.
Brice Huang, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Debajyoti Kar, Indian Institute of Science
Jamie Tucker-Foltz, Harvard University
Joakim Blikstad, KTH Royal Institute of Technology
Mahdieh Labani, Macquarie University
Rehema Hamis Mwawado, University of Rwanda
Uddalok Sarkar, Indian Statistical Institute Kolkata
Gizem Özdil, École polytechnique fédérale de Lausanne
Sreejan Kumar, Princeton University
Bridget Chak, University of Chicago
Li-Wen Chiu, National Yang Ming Chiao Tung University
Md. Saiful Islam, University of Rochester
Rutendo Jakachira, Brown University
Tsai-Min Chen, National Taiwan University
Wenhao Gao, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Brianna Wimer, University of Notre Dame
Emily Kuang, Rochester Institute of Technology
Eunkyung Jo, University of California - Irvine
Georgianna Lin, University of Toronto
Gustavo Pacheco Santiago, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México
Marcelo Marques da Rocha, Universidade Federal Fluminense
Yulia Goldenberg, Ben Gurion University
Zixiong Su, The University of Tokyo
Berivan Isik, Stanford University
Blake Bordelon, Harvard University
Cristhian Delgado Fajardo, University of Otago
Denish Azamuke, Makerere University
Fuzhao Xue, National University of Singapore
Heinrich Pieter van Deventer, University of Pretoria
Imane Araf, Mohammed VI Polytechnic University
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Jihoon Tack, Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology
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Marcos Paulo Silva Gôlo, Universidade de São Paulo
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Miriam Rateike, Saarland University
Mitchell Wortsman, University of Washington
Natalia Gil Canto, Universidade Estadual de Campinas
Nicolás Esteban Valenzuela Figueroa, Universidad de Chile
Omprakash Chakraborty, Indian Institute of Technology Kharagpur
S. Durga, Indian Institute of Technology Bombay
Strato Angsoteng Bayitaa, C.K. Tedam University of Technology and Applied Sciences
Yiding Jiang, Carnegie Mellon University
Yifan Zhang, National University of Singapore
Antoine Yang, National Institute for Research in Digital Science and Technology (Inria)
Astitva Srivastava, International Institute of Information Technology Hyderabad
Chen Yu, National University of Singapore
Ethan Tseng, Princeton University
Matheus Viana da Silva, Universidade Federal de São Carlos
Sunghwan Hong, Korea University
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Vincent Milimo Masilokwa Punabantu, University of Cape Town
Yanxi Li, The University of Sydney
Yosef Gandelsman, University of California - Berkeley
Ziqi Huang, Nanyang Technological University
Ke Sun, University of California - San Diego
Kyungjin Lee, Seoul National University
Allahsera Auguste Tapo, Rochester Institute of Technology
Cheng-Han Chiang, National Taiwan University
Liunian Li, University of California - Los Angeles
Sarah Masud, Indraprastha Institute of Information Technology Delhi
Sumanth Doddapaneni, Indian Institute of Technology Madras
Zhiqing Sun, Carnegie Mellon University
Jiayuan Ye, National University of Singapore
Miranda Wei, University of Washington
Neha Jawalkar, Indian Institute of Science
Yihui Zeng, Arizona State University
Aaditya Naik, University of Pennsylvania
Thanh Le-Cong, The University of Melbourne
Diego Hernando Useche Reyes, Universidad Nacional de Colombia
Elies Gil-Fuster, Free University of Berlin
Juan David Nieto García, Universidade Estadual de Campinas
Lia Yeh, University of Oxford
Zezhou Huang, Columbia University
Jennifer Switzer, University of California - San Diego
Jiaxin Lin, University of Texas at Austin
Jinhyung Koo, Daegu Gyeongbuk Institute of Science & Technology
Maurine Chepkoech, University of Cape Town
Qinghao Hu, Nanyang Technological University
Anjali Gupta, Indian Institute of Technology Delhi
Shunhua Jiang, Columbia University
Shyam Sivasathya Narayanan, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Venkata Naga Sreenivasulu Karnati, Indian Institute of Science
Yang P. Liu, Stanford University
Aditi Jha, Princeton University
Klavdia Zemlianova, New York University
Devon Jarvis, University of the Witwatersrand
Emily Schwenger, Albert Einstein College of Medicine
Reihaneh Torkzadehmahani, TU Munich
Xin Liu, University of Washington
Qian Niu, Kyoto University
Karthik Mahadevan, University of Toronto
Meena Muralikumar, University of Washington
Nika Nour, University of California - Irvine
Pang Suwanaposee, University of Canterbury
Ryan Louie, Northwestern University
Tiffany Li, University of Illinois - Urbana-Champaign
Zhongyi Zhou, The University of Tokyo
Eunji Kim, Seoul National University
Hayeon Lee, Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology
Julius von Kügelgen, Max Planck Institute for Intelligent Systems
Kaloma Usman Majikumna, Euromed University of Fes, Morocco
Lily Xu, Harvard University
Maksym Andriushchenko, EPFL
Pierre Marion, Fondation Sciences Mathématiques de Paris
Shashank Rajput, University of Wisconsin - Madison
Sheheryar Zaidi, University of Oxford
Sindy Löwe, University of Amsterdam
Tan Wang, Nanyang Technological University
Xiaobo Xia, University of Sydney
Yixin Liu, Monash University
Efthymios Tzinis, University of Illinois - Urbana-Champaign
Elizabeth Ndunge Mutua, Strathmore University
Haipeng Xiong, National University of Singapore
Jianyuan Guo, University of Sydney
Jiawei Ren, Nanyang Technological University
Juhong Min, Pohang University of Science and Technology
Liliane Momeni, University of Oxford
Qianqian Wang, Cornell University
Shuo Yang, University of Technology Sydney
Tahir Javed, Indian Institute of Technology Madras
Wei-Ting Chen, National Taiwan University
Yuming Jiang. Nanyang Technological University
Yu-Ying Yeh, University of California - San Diego
Binbin Xie, University of Massachusetts - Amherst
Clara Isabel Meister, ETH Zurich
Julia Mendelsohn, University of Michigan
Sachin Kumar, Carnegie Mellon University
Saley Vishal Vivek, Indian Institute of Technology Delhi
Swarnadeep Saha, University of North Carolina - Chapel Hill
Shuyi Wang, The University of Queensland
Thong Nguyen, National University of Singapore
Ussen Kimanuka, Pan African University Institute For Basic Sciences, Technology and Innovation
Amy Elizabeth Gooden, University Kwazulu-Natal
Promise Ricardo Agbedanu, University of Rwanda
Alexander Bienstock, New York University
Daniel De Almeida Braga, Universite Rennes 1
Gaurang Bansal, National University of Singapore
Nicolas Huaman Groschopf, Leibniz University of Hanover
Simon Spies, Max Planck Institute for Software Systems
Ilkwon Byun, Seoul National University
Margaret Fortman, University of Wisconsin - Madison
Oscar Higgott, University College London
Sam Gunn, University of California - Berkeley
Jessie J. Smith, University of Colorado - Boulder
Wenjie Wang, National University of Singapore
Nikolaos Tziavelis, Northeastern University
Humphrey Owuor Otieno, University of Cape Town
Jiarong Xing, Rice University
Shweta Pandey, Indian Institute of Science
Sunil Kumar, Indraprastha Institute of Information Technology Delhi
Yang Zhou, Harvard University
Yujeong Choi, Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology
Daniel Mutembesa, Makerere University
Kevin Tian, Stanford University
Prerona Chatterjee, Tata Institute of Fundamental Research
Sampson Wong, The University of Sydney
Santhoshini Velusamy, Harvard University
Sruthi Gorantla, Indian Institute of Science
Wenshuo Guo, University of California, Berkeley
Malvern Madondo, Emory University
Steffen Schneider, University of Tübingen
Nalini Singh, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Roman Koshkin, Okinawa Institute of Science and Technology
Vishwali Mhasawade, New York University
Anupriya Tuli, Indraprastha Institute of Information Technology - Delhi
Chia-Hsing Chiu, National Taiwan University of Science and Technology
Dennis Makafui Dogbey, University of Cape Town
George Hope Chidziwisano, Michigan State University
Harmanpreet Kaur, University of Michigan
Srishti Palani, University of California, San Diego
Amir-Hossein Karimi, Max Planck Institute for Intelligent Systems
Anastasia Koloskova, EPFL, Lausanne
Anirudh Goyal, University of Montreal
Daniel Kang, Stanford University
Elena Fillola, University of Bristol
Emmanuel Chinyere Echeonwu, Nnamdi Azikiwe University, Nigeria
Gal Yona, Weizmann Institute of Science
Hae Beom Lee, KAIST
Jaekyeom Kim, Seoul National University
Logan Engstrom, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Piyushi Manupriya, Indian Institute of Technology - Hyderabad
Qinbin Li, National University of Singapore
Shen Li, National University of Singapore
Shubhada Agrawal, Tata Institute of Fundamental Research
Theekshana Dissanayake, Queensland University of Technology
Tianyuan Jin, National University of Singapore
Yun Li, The University of New South Wales
Andrea Burns, Boston University
Fangzhou Hong, Nanyang Technological University
Haibin Wu, National Taiwan University
Jogendra Nath Kundu, Indian Institute of Science
Kelvin C.K. Chan, Nanyang Technological University
Sanghyun Woo, KAIST
Sara El-Ateif, National School For Computer Science (ENSIAS)
Soo Ye Kim, KAIST
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Xinlong Wang, The University of Adelaide
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Zhiqin Chen, Simon Fraser University
Byungjin Jun, Northwestern University
Soundarya Ramesh, National University of Singapore
Derguene Mbaye, Universite Cheikh Anta Diop
Eya Hammami, LARODEC
Haoyue Shi, Toyota Technological Institute at Chicago
Kalpesh Krishna, University of Massachusetts Amherst
Peter Hase, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Rochelle Choenni, University of Amsterdam
Chandan Kumar, Indian Institute of Technology - Kharagpur
Kevin Loughlin, University of Michigan
Teodora Baluta, National University of Singapore
Yuqing Zhu, University of California, Santa Barbara
Aishwarya Sivaraman, University of California, Los Angeles
Jenna Wise, Carnegie Mellon University
Alicja Dutkiewicz, Leiden University
Hsin-Yuan Huang, California Institute of Technology
Mykyta Onizhuk, The University of Chicago
Sayantan Chakraborty, Tata Institute of Fundamental Research
Brian Kundinger, Duke University
Yiru Chen, Columbia University
Yu Meng, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Zheng Wang, Nanyang Technological University
Aishwariya Chakraborty, Indian Institute of Technology - Kharagpur
Alireza Farshin, KTH Royal Institute of Technology
Erika Hunhoff, University of Colorado Boulder
S. VenkataKeerthy, Indian Institute of Technology - Hyderabad
Soroush Ghodrati, University of California, San Diego
Yejin Lee, Seoul National University
Jan van den Brand, KTH Royal Institute of Technology
Mahsa Derakhshan, University of Maryland, College Park
Sidhanth Mohanty, University of California, Berkeley
Connor Brennan, University of Pennsylvania
Abdelkareem Bedri, Carnegie Mellon University
Brendan David-John, University of Florida
Hiromu Yakura, University of Tsukuba
Manaswi Saha, University of Washington
Muratcan Cicek, University of California, Santa Cruz
Prashan Madumal, University of Melbourne
Alon Brutzkus, Tel Aviv University
Chin-Wei Huang, Universite de Montreal
Eli Sherman, Johns Hopkins University
Esther Rolf, University of California, Berkeley
Imke Mayer, Fondation Sciences Mathématique de Paris
Jean Michel Sarr, Cheikh Anta Diop University
Lei Bai, University of New South Wales
Nontawat Charoenphakdee, The University of Tokyo
Preetum Nakkiran, Harvard University
Sravanti Addepalli, Indian Institute of Science
Taesik Gong, Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology
Vihari Piratla, Indian Institute of Technology - Bombay
Vishakha Patil, Indian Institute of Science
Wilson Tsakane Mongwe, University of Johannesburg
Xinshi Chen, Georgia Institute of Technology
Yadan Luo, University of Queensland
Benjamin van Niekerk, University of Stellenbosch
Eric Heiden, University of Southern California
Gyeongsik Moon, Seoul National University
Hou-Ning Hu, National Tsing Hua University
Nan Wu, New York University
Shaoshuai Shi, The Chinese University of Hong Kong
Yifan Liu, University of Adelaide
Yu Wu, University of Technology Sydney
Zhengqi Li, Cornell University
Xiaofan Zhang, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Anjalie Field, Carnegie Mellon University
Mingda Chen, Toyota Technological Institute at Chicago
Shang-Yu Su, National Taiwan University
Yanai Elazar, Bar-Ilan
Julien Gamba, Universidad Carlos III de Madrid
Shuwen Deng, Yale University
Yunusa Simpa Abdulsalm, Mohammed VI Polytechnic University
Adriana Sejfia, University of Southern California
John Cyphert, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Amira Abbas, University of KwaZulu-Natal
Mozafari Ghoraba Fereshte, EPFL
Yanqing Peng, University of Utah
Huynh Nguyen Van, University of Technology Sydney
Michael Sammler, Saarland University, MPI-SWS
Sihang Liu, University of Virginia
Yun-Zhan Cai, National Cheng Kung University
Aidasadat Mousavifar, EPFL Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne
Peilin Zhong, Columbia University
Siddharth Bhandari, Tata Institute of Fundamental Research
Soheil Behnezhad, University of Maryland at College Park
Zhe Feng, Harvard University
Caroline Haimerl, New York University
Mai Gamal, German University in Cairo
Catalin Voss, Stanford university
Hua Hua, Australian National University
Zhanna Sarsenbayeva, University of Melbourne
Abdulsalam Ometere Latifat, African University of Science and Technology Abuja
Adji Bousso Dieng, Columbia University
Anshul Mittal, IIT Delhi
Blake Woodworth, Toyota Technological Institute at Chicago
Diana Cai, Princeton University
Francesco Locatello, ETH Zurich
Ihsane Gryech, International University Of Rabat, Morocco
Jaemin Yoo, Seoul National University
Maruan Al-Shedivat, Carnegie Mellon University
Ousseynou Mbaye, Alioune Diop University of Bambey
Rendani Mbuvha, University of Johannesburg
Shibani Santurkar, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Takashi Ishida, University of Tokyo
Chenxi Liu, Johns Hopkins University
Kayode Kolawole Olaleye, Stellenbosch University
Ruohan Gao, The University of Texas at Austin
Tiancheng Sun, University of California San Diego
Xuanyi Dong, University of Technology Sydney
Yu Liu, Chinese University of Hong Kong
Zhi Tian, University of Adelaide
Naoki Kimura, University of Tokyo
Abigail See, Stanford University
Ananya Sai B, IIT Madras
Byeongchang Kim, Seoul National University
Daniel Patrick Fried, UC Berkeley
Hao Peng, University of Washington
Reinald Kim Amplayo, University of Edinburgh
Sungjoon Park, Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology
Ajith Suresh, Indian Institute of Science
Itsaka Rakotonirina, Inria Nancy
Milad Nasr, University of Massachusetts Amherst
Sarah Ann Scheffler, Boston University
Caroline Lemieux, UC Berkeley
Conrad Watt, University of Cambridge
Umang Mathur, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Amy Greene, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Leonard Wossnig, University College London
Yuan Su, University of Maryland at College Park
Amir Gilad, Tel Aviv University
Nofar Carmeli, Technion
Zhuoyue Zhao, University of Utah
Chinmay Kulkarni, University of Utah
Nicolai Oswald, University of Edinburgh
Saksham Agarwal, Cornell University
Emmanouil Zampetakis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Manuela Fischer, ETH Zurich
Pranjal Dutta, Chennai Mathematical Institute
Thodoris Lykouris, Cornell University
Yuan Deng, Duke University
Ella Batty, Columbia University
Neha Spenta Wadia, University of California - Berkeley
Reuben Feinman, New York University
Gierad Laput, Carnegie Mellon University
Mike Schaekermann, University of Waterloo
Minsuk (Brian) Kahng, Georgia Institute of Technology
Niels van Berkel, The University of Melbourne
Siqi Wu, Australian National University
Xiang Zhang, The University of New South Wales
Abhijeet Awasthi, Indian Institute of Technology - Bombay
Aditi Raghunathan, Stanford University
Futoshi Futami, University of Tokyo
Lin Chen, Yale University
Qian Yu, University of Southern California
Ravid Shwartz-Ziv, Hebrew University
Shuai Li, Chinese University of Hong Kong
Shuang Liu, University of California - San Diego
Stephen Tu, University of California - Berkeley
Steven James, University of the Witwatersrand
Xinchen Yan, University of Michigan
Zelda Mariet, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Antoine Miech, INRIA
Arsha Nagrani, University of Oxford
Arulkumar S, Indian Institute of Technology - Madras
Joseph Redmon, University of Washington
Raymond Yeh, University of Illinois - Urbana-Champaign
Shanmukha Ramakrishna Vedantam, Georgia Institute of Technology
Lili Wei, Hong Kong University of Science & Technology
Rizanne Elbakly, Egypt-Japan University of Science and Technology
Shilin Zhu, University of California - San Diego
Anne Cocos, University of Pennsylvania
Hongwei Wang, Shanghai Jiao Tong University
Jonathan Herzig, Tel Aviv University
Rotem Dror, Technion - Israel Institute of Technology
Shikhar Vashishth, Indian Institute of Science - Bangalore
Yang Liu, University of Edinburgh
Yoon Kim, Harvard University
Zhehuai Chen, Shanghai Jiao Tong University
Imane khaouja, Université Internationale de Rabat
Aayush Jain, University of California - Los Angeles
Gowtham Kaki, Purdue University
Joseph Benedict Nyansiro, University of Dar es Salaam
Reyhaneh Jabbarvand, University of California - Irvine
Victor Lanvin, Fondation Sciences Mathématiques de Paris
Erika Ye, California Institute of Technology
Lingjiao Chen, University of Wisconsin - Madison
Andrea Lattuada, ETH Zurich
Chen Sun, Tsinghua University
Lana Josipovic, EPFL
Michael Schaarschmidt, University of Cambridge
Rachee Singh, University of Massachusetts - Amherst
Stephen Mallon, The University of Sydney
Chiu Wai Sam Wong, University of California, Berkeley
Eric Balkanski, Harvard University
Haifeng Xu, University of Southern California
Motahhare Eslami, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
Sarah D'Angelo, Northwestern University
Sarah Mcroberts, University of Minnesota - Twin Cities
Sarah Webber, The University of Melbourne
Aude Genevay, Fondation Sciences Mathématiques de Paris
Dustin Tran, Columbia University
Jamie Hayes, University College London
Jin-Hwa Kim, Seoul National University
Ling Luo, The University of Sydney
Martin Arjovsky, New York University
Sayak Ray Chowdhury, Indian Institute of Science
Song Zuo, Tsinghua University
Taco Cohen, University of Amsterdam
Yuhuai Wu, University of Toronto
Yunhe Wang, Peking University
Yunye Gong, Cornell University
Avijit Dasgupta, International Institute of Information Technology - Hyderabad
Franziska Müller, Saarland University - Saarbrücken GSCS and Max Planck Institute for Informatics
George Trigeorgis, Imperial College London
Iro Armeni, Stanford University
Saining Xie, University of California, San Diego
Yu-Chuan Su, University of Texas, Austin
Sangeun Oh, Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology
Shuo Yang, Shanghai Jiao Tong University
Bidisha Samanta, Indian Institute of Technology Kharagpur
Ekaterina Vylomova, The University of Melbourne
Jianpeng Cheng, The University of Edinburgh
Kevin Clark, Stanford University
Meng Zhang, Tsinghua University
Preksha Nama, Indian Institute of Technology Madras
Tim Rocktaschel, University College London
Romain Gay, ENS - École Normale Supérieure
Xi He, Duke University
Yupeng Zhang, University of Maryland, College Park
Christoffer Quist Adamsen, Aarhus University
Muhammad Ali Gulzar, University of California, Los Angeles
Oded Padon, Tel-Aviv University
Amir Shaikhha, EPFL CS
Jingbo Shang, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
Ahmed M. Said Mohamed Tawfik Issa, Georgia Institute of Technology
Khanh Nguyen, University of California, Irvine
Radhika Mittal, University of California, Berkeley
Ryan Beckett, Princeton University
Samaneh Movassaghi, Australian National University
Chitra Javali, Security, The University of New South Wales
Dana McKay, Human Computer Interaction, The University of Melbourne
Kwan Hui Lim, Machine Learning, The University of Melbourne
Weitao Xu, Machine Perception, The University of Queensland
Chungkuk YOO, Mobile Computing, Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology
Hong ZHANG, Systems and Networking, The Hong Kong University of Science and Technology
Quanming YAO, Machine Learning, The Hong Kong University of Science and Technology
Tian TAN, Speech Technology, Shanghai Jiao Tong University
Woosang LIM, Machine Learning, Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology
Ying CHEN, Systems and Networking, Tsinghua University
Arpita Biswas, Algorithms, Indian Institute of Science
Aniruddha Singh Kushwaha, Networking, Indian Institute of Technology Bombay
Anirban Santara, Machine Learning, Indian Institute of Technology Kharagpur
Gurunath Reddy, Speech Technology, Indian Institute of Technology Kharagpur
Cameron, Po-Hsuan Chen, Computational Neuroscience, Princeton University
Grace Lindsay, Computational Neuroscience, Columbia University
Martino Sorbaro Sindaci, Computational Neuroscience, The University of Edinburgh
Koki Nagano, Human-Computer Interaction, University of Southern California
Arvind Satyanarayan, Human-Computer Interaction, Stanford University
Amy Xian Zhang, Human-Computer Interaction, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Olivier Bachem, Machine Learning, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Zurich
Tianqi Chen, Machine Learning, University of Washington
Emily Denton, Machine Learning, New York University
Yves-Laurent Kom Samo, Machine Learning, University of Oxford
Daniel Jaymin Mankowitz, Machine Learning, Technion - Israel Institute of Technology
Lucas Maystre , Machine Learning, École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne
Arvind Neelakantan, Machine Learning, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
Ludwig Schmidt, Machine Learning, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Shandian Zhe, Machine Learning, Purdue University, West Lafayette
Eugen Beck, Machine Perception, RWTH Aachen University
Yu-Wei Chao, Machine Perception, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
Wei Liu, Machine Perception, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Aron Monszpart, Machine Perception, University College London
Thomas Schoeps, Machine Perception, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Zurich
Chia-Yin Tsai, Machine Perception, Carnegie Mellon University
Hossein Esfandiari, Market Algorithms, University of Maryland, College Park
Sandy Heydrich, Market Algorithms, Saarland University - Saarbrucken GSCS
Rad Niazadeh, Market Algorithms, Cornell University
Sadra Yazdanbod, Market Algorithms, Georgia Institute of Technology
Lei Kang, Mobile Computing, University of Wisconsin
Tauhidur Rahman, Mobile Computing, Cornell University
Yuhao Zhu, Mobile Computing, University of Texas, Austin
Tamer Alkhouli, Natural Language Processing, RWTH Aachen University
Jose Camacho Collados, Natural Language Processing, Sapienza - Università di Roma
Kartik Nayak, Privacy and Security, University of Maryland, College Park
Nicolas Papernot, Privacy and Security, Pennsylvania State University
Damian Vizar, Privacy and Security, École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne
Xi Wu, Privacy and Security, University of Wisconsin
Marcelo Sousa, Programming Languages and Software Engineering, University of Oxford
Xiang Ren, Structured Data and Database Management, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
Andrew Crotty, Systems and Networking, Brown University
Ilias Marinos, Systems and Networking, University of Cambridge
Kay Ousterhout, Systems and Networking, University of California, Berkeley
Bahar Salehi, Natural Language Processing, University of Melbourne
Siqi Liu, Computational Neuroscience, University of Sydney
Qian Ge, Systems, University of New South Wales
Bo Xin, Artificial Intelligence, Peking University
Xingyu Zeng, Computer Vision, The Chinese University of Hong Kong
Suining He, Mobile Computing, The Hong Kong University of Science and Technology
Zhenzhe Zheng, Mobile Networking, Shanghai Jiao Tong University
Jinpeng Wang, Natural Language Processing, Peking University
Zijia Lin, Search and Information Retrieval, Tsinghua University
Shinae Woo, Networking and Distributed Systems, Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology
Jungdam Won, Robotics, Seoul National University
Palash Dey, Algorithms, Indian Institute of Science
Avisek Lahiri, Machine Perception, Indian Institute of Technology Kharagpur
Malavika Samak, Programming Languages and Software Engineering, Indian Institute of Science
Heike Adel, Natural Language Processing, University of Munich
Thang Bui, Speech Technology, University of Cambridge
Victoria Caparrós Cabezas, Distributed Systems, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Zurich
Nadav Cohen, Machine Learning, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem
Josip Djolonga, Probabilistic Inference, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Zurich
Jakob Julian Engel, Computer Vision, Technische Universität München
Nikola Gvozdiev, Computer Networking, University College London
Felix Hill, Language Understanding, University of Cambridge
Durk Kingma, Deep Learning, University of Amsterdam
Massimo Nicosia, Statistical Natural Language Processing, University of Trento
George Prekas, Operating Systems, École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne
Roman Prutkin, Graph Algorithms, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology
Siva Reddy, Multilingual Semantic Parsing, The University of Edinburgh
Immanuel Trummer, Structured Data Analysis, École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne
Margarita Vald, Security, Tel Aviv University
Waleed Ammar, Natural Language Processing, Carnegie Mellon University
Justin Meza, Systems Reliability, Carnegie Mellon University
Nick Arnosti, Market Algorithms, Stanford University
Osbert Bastani, Programming Languages, Stanford University
Saurabh Gupta, Computer Vision, University of California, Berkeley
Masoud Moshref Javadi, Computer Networking, University of Southern California
Muhammad Naveed, Security, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Aaron Parks, Mobile Networking, University of Washington
Kyle Rector, Human Computer Interaction, University of Washington
Riley Spahn, Privacy, Columbia University
Yun Teng, Computer Graphics, University of California, Santa Barbara
Carl Vondrick, Machine Perception,, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Xiaolan Wang, Structured Data, University of Massachusetts Amherst
Tan Zhang, Mobile Systems, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Wojciech Zaremba, Machine Learning, New York University
Guosheng Lin, Machine Perception, University of Adelaide
Kellie Webster, Natural Language Processing, University of Sydney
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Fellowship Amount: Selected candidates will be offered admission to Ph.D. program in one of IITs/IISc with a fellowship of Rs.70000 p.m. for initial 2 yrs, then Rs.75000 p.m. for the 3rd yr, and Rs.80000 p.m. in the 4th and 5th yrs. A research grant of Rs.2 Lakh p.a. will be provided to each Fellow for a period of 5 yrs to cover their academic ...
Prime Minister Fellowship for Doctoral Research is a Fellowship scheme which is under the supervision of the Central Government of India. It is launched to provide financial support to the meritorious students pursuing PhD courses. Under the scheme, the scholar gets a monthly stipend of INR 70,000. Particulars.
Details. Prime Minister's Fellowship for Doctoral Research scheme is a prestigious initiative of the Science and Engineering Research Board (SERB), Department of Science & Technology, Government of India towards the advancement of university research engagements in line with industry requirements. This scheme is aimed at encouraging young ...
The Google PhD Fellowship Program was created to recognize outstanding graduate students doing exceptional and innovative research in areas relevant to computer science and related fields. Fellowships support promising PhD candidates of all backgrounds who seek to influence the future of technology. Google's mission is to foster inclusive ...
Programme Type: Research and Development Focus Area: Science, Technology, Engineering, Agriculture, Medicine Target Audience: Ph.D., Scientists/ Researchers Funding Agency: Science and Engineering Research Board (SERB) Eligibility: The applicant should be a full-time Ph.D. scholar in any recognized Indian university/institute/research laboratory. The scholar's Ph.D. registration date should ...
Between March and April. Dr Eduard Gubelin Research Scholarship. Dr Eduard Gübelin Association. for Research. The last date to apply is June 30th. Sir Ratan Tata Trust & Navajbai Ratan TataTrust Education Grants. Tata Trusts. The last date to apply is May 31st. Commonwealth PhD Scholarships.
89+ PhD Scholarships, Fellowships and grants for international students in India. Full list of PhD Scholarships, Fellowships and grants for International students in India- eligibility criteria, deadlines, application form, selection process & more!
Scholarships for Your phd Studies in India. Find a detailed list of scholarships for postgraduate programmes, financial aid for PhDs, student fellowships, doctorate grants, and more. Pick a scholarship for your PhD and apply to partially or completely cover your tuition fees for universities, business schools, law schools, medical schools ...
Scholarships to study a PhD in India. Programmes Universities Scholarships. Page 1 | 23 Scholarships . Filters 1. Filters 1. 23 Scholarships . The scholarships listed below are applicable to students of all nationalities. Please create an account to see personalized results.
The call for inviting applications under INSPIRE Scholarship SHE-2024 has been opened from 01st September, 2024 to 15th October 2024 (till 23:59 hrs. ... Call for Applications under INSPIRE Fellowship 2021 Newton-Bhabha Fund PhD Placement Programme 2020-21 List of selected Indian and UK applicants INSPIRE Fellowship-2020 13th Advt. Level-2 ...
Total number of Record (s): 42. ISTI Portal is a central repository of content generated in and by the Indian STI ecosystem with a major thrust to reach out to students, researchers, scholars, scientists from India and abroad, as to help them choose fellowships, scholarships, funding, and startup opportunities in India.
The objective of the Overseas Visiting Doctoral Fellowship is to build national capacity in frontier areas of Science and Engineering, which are of interest to India by providing research training to Ph.D. students admitted in the Indian institutions in overseas universities/ institutions of repute and to provide an opportunity to performing Indian research students to gain exposure and access ...
1. Introduction: 1.1. The ICSSR supports and encourages Ph.D. scholars to pursue their doctoral research in social and human sciences. The award of Doctoral fellowship takes into consideration innovative research proposals having potential of path breaking addition to existing body of knowledge. The priority of the ICSSR is to address changing ...
On 25th January 2018, at the 25th anniversary of the ASEAN-India Commemorative Summit in New Delhi, the Prime Minister of India Shri Narendra Modi, in the presence of the leaders of all 10 ASEAN countries announced the Doctoral fellowship in India for ASEAN. Under this Programme, 1000 fellowships will be provided to ASEAN citizens to pursue an ...
Scholarships for pursuing doctoral studies (PhD) in Mathematics / Applied Mathematics for the academic year 2021-22. The National Board for Higher Mathematics (NBHM) invites applications to appear for its Doctoral Scholarship Written Test (hereafter called "the test") scheduled for1: 10 April 2021 Sunday, 11 April 2021, 1400-1700 hrs ...
Research CommitteeThe Institute of Chartered Accountants of India30th March, 2021. ICAI Doctoral Scholarship Scheme 2021 - An Initiative by the Research Committee (Last Date extended till December 31, 2021) Announcement. Application Form.
Details of the beneficiaries to whom fellowship has been released under AICTE Doctoral Fellowship (ADF) scheme in January 2022. Details of the beneficiaries to whom fellowship has been released under AICTE Doctoral Fellowship (ADF) scheme in December 2021. Details of the beneficiaries to whom fellowship has been failed under AICTE Doctoral ...
The Department of Higher Education, MHRD, is responsible for the overall development of the basic infrastructure of Higher Education sector, both in terms of policy and planning. Under a planned development process, the Department looks after expansion of access and qualitative improvement in the Higher Education, through world class Universities, Colleges and other Institutions.
1 of 1. Find exclusive scholarships for international PhD students pursuing Humanities studies in India. Search and apply online today.
QS World University Subject Rankings 2024 has ranked BITS Pilani globally at. 101-150 in Pharmacy and Pharmacology. 301-350 in 4 subjects namely, EEE, Computer Science, Mechanical and Chemical Engineering. 451-500 in 3 subjects, namely, Mathematics, Business & management Studies and Physics & Astronomy. 501-550 in Chemistry.
Institute assistantships will be available to eligible students as per prevailing (MoE, GOI) norms, as applicable from time to time. The present rates of Institute Assistantships are as below: First Two Years. Rs.31,000/-. For Subsequent Three Years. Rs.35,000/-.
2021 2020 2019 2018 2017 2016 2015 2014 2023; 2022; 2021; 2020; 2019; 2018; 2017; 2016; 2015; 2014; Algorithms, Optimizations and Markets. Brice Huang, Massachusetts Institute of Technology ... Google India PhD Fellowships. Palash Dey, Algorithms, Indian Institute of Science. Avisek Lahiri, Machine Perception, Indian Institute of Technology ...
Women Scientists Scheme-A (WOS-A) provides platform to women scientists and technologists for pursuing research in basic or applied sciences in frontier areas of science and engineering. The scheme plays pivotal role in gender mainstreaming as it not only prevents brain drain from S&T system but also train and retain women in the system.