PhD Research Intern, Autonomous Vehicles - 2026

All the best with your application!

Want more jobs like this straight to your inbox?

Summary

Location

Taipei / Hsinchu

Work

Internship

About this Job

We are now recruiting top Research Interns (Autonomous Vehicle Research)! AI-powered autonomous vehicles that can learn, reason, and interact with people are no longer science fiction. Self-driving cars, autonomous delivery vehicles, and autonomous construction vehicles, among others, are getting increasingly close to widespread deployment. However, fundamental research questions still need to be addressed for us to achieve full vehicle autonomy. For instance, how can we: Enable novel training paradigms that leverage simulation to train AV policies in closed-loop? Equip autonomous vehicles with online and offline assurances that meet the standards for safety-critical systems? Ensure that autonomous vehicles work seamlessly in new places?

These are some of the exciting questions that the NVIDIA Autonomous Vehicle Research group is tackling. We bring together a diverse, interdisciplinary research team working on core topics in vehicle autonomy, ranging from perception and prediction to planning and control, as well as critical related areas such as decision making under uncertainty, deep learning, reinforcement learning, and the verification and validation of safety-critical AI systems. Our focus is on basic research; lab members are encouraged to publish their work and open-source code. NVIDIA is well known for its team culture, and lab researchers are able to closely interact with others within the company who are experts in perception systems, machine learning, and robotics. There is an opportunity to make a strong impact on products, while having the freedom and bandwidth to conduct ground-breaking publishable research.

What you'll be doing:

  • Designing and implementing cutting-edge techniques in the field of vehicle autonomy.
  • Publishing your original research.
  • Collaborating with other research team members, a diverse set of internal product teams, and external researchers.
  • Transferring technology you've developed to relevant product groups.

What we need to see:

  • Pursuing a PhD in Robotics, Computer Science, Computer Engineering or related field.
  • Relevant research experience in the field of vehicle / robot autonomy.
  • Strong knowledge of theory and practice of vehicle / robot autonomy, or a related area with a strong interest in connecting your work to autonomous vehicles.
  • A track record of research excellence with your work published in top conferences and journals such as RSS, ICRA, IJRR, NeurIPS, ICML, CVPR, TAC, etc, and other research artifacts such as software projects.
  • Exceptional programming skills in Python; C++ and parallel programming (e.g., CUDA) are a plus.
  • Knowledge of common machine learning frameworks such as PyTorch and Tensorflow.
  • Strong communication and interpersonal skills are required along with the ability to work in a dynamic, research-focused team.

Are you dedicated, upbeat and dynamic with excellent analytical ability? Are you an engineer passionate and highly motivated about solving complex problems? If so, you may be a perfect fit for NVIDIA!

About the Company

NVIDIA logo

NVIDIA

Public Company
Transportation & Autonomous VehiclesRobotics Hardware & ComponentsRobotics Software & AI

Since its founding in 1993, NVIDIA (NASDAQ: NVDA) has been a pioneer in accelerated computing. The company’s invention of the GPU in 1999 sparked the growth of the PC gaming market, redefined computer graphics, ignited the era of modern AI and is fueling the creation of the metaverse. NVIDIA is now a full-stack computing company with data-center-scale offerings that are reshaping industry.

View details
Related Jobs

Get the week's best robotics jobs

We review hundreds of postings weekly and hand-pick the top roles for you. High-salary positions, top companies, remote opportunities.

Please enter a valid email address

Unsubscribe anytime. We respect your privacy.