Honda Research Institute USA, Inc. in Mountain View, California, has an opening for an engineer to work on a multi-sensor driver assistance system. The successful applicant will be a part of a research team working on a real-time driver system that locates and recognizes objects using laser range sensors and cameras mounted on an experimental vehicle. His/her responsibilities include developing software for recording synchronized sensor data on the vehicle, maintaining a calibrated sensor system, collecting data of traffic scenes with our experimental vehicle and the management/maintenance of the recorded sensor data. He/she will also be developing real-time software in collaboration with research staff to estimate the motion of the vehicle based on IMU data, vehicle odometry data, and GPS measurements.

A minimum of an M.S. degree in Computer Science, EE or related field and excellent skills in C++ and Linux are required. The candidate must also have experience with camera and/or laser systems and large scale data processing. CUDA programming, robotics/computer vision, and experience with camera calibration, sensor synchronization, CAN bus, GPS, IMU, and vehicle odometry are preferred.

This is a limited 1-year position with the possibility of further extensions at the company discretion. Candidates must have the legal right to work for Honda Research Institute in the U.S.A.
To apply for one of these positions, please send a cover letter and your resume to:
career2013@honda-ri.com
with the subject line clearly indicating the job number you are apply for  (Job Number: P12T03). Name your attachments as "FirstName.LastName.UniversityName.cv.pdf".



--
Lorenzo Riano, PhD
Research Scientist
EECS
University of California Berkeley
Berkeley, CA
94720

web: http://www.eecs.berkeley.edu/~riano/
email: lorenzo.riano@berkeley.edu
skype: lorenzo.riano

“I have come to believe that the whole world is an enigma, a harmless enigma that is made terrible by our own mad attempt to interpret it as though it had an underlying truth.” 
Umberto Eco, The name of the Rose