Doctor of Philosophy in Electrical and Computer Engineering - Robotics and Cyberphysical Systems
国际学生入学条件
All offAll official Transcripts. A bachelor’s degree or its foreign equivalent from an accredited college or university. Official transcripts of your grades.
Three letters of recommendation. Applicants are required to upload a transcript (may be unofficial at this time) including the key from all attended colleges or universities.
The transcript must show the name of the student, name of the issuing institution, name of courses taken, and the grades received in those courses.
The Graduate School does not have a minimum TOEFL or IELTS score requirement. If you are offered admission and accept our offer and have scored below a 27 on the Speaking sub-section of the TOEFL iBT or below an 8.0 on the Speaking sub-section of the IELTS you will be required to take an English placement test at the start of the fall term. Students who do not pass the test will be required to enroll in English Language Program classes.
GRE
General Test - optional/not required
Additional departmental requirements
Ph.D. applicants are required to select a research area of interest when applying.
Optional: Applicants may submit a statement with their application, briefly describing how their academic interests, background, or life experiences would advance Princeton’s commitment to diversity within the Graduate School and to training individuals in an increasingly diverse society. Please submit a succinct statement of no more than 500 words.
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雅思考试总分
6.0
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- 雅思总分:6
- 托福网考总分:60
- 托福笔试总分:160
- 其他语言考试:NA
课程简介
The powerful capabilities enabled by electrical engineering are being drawn pervasively into the real world. From personal robots to smart cities, co-operating meaningfully and safely with complex real-world processes requires modeling, perceiving, rationalizing and controlling those processes. This involves scientific and behavioral understanding, sensing technologies, computing technologies, formal-analysis methods, and control algorithms. Our research integrates these paradigms to establish new interdisciplinary fundamentals and envision new classes of applications. With the potential of cyberphysical systems to have deep and broad impacts on our lives, a confluence of technologies and theories must be developed that can serve as a platform for blending the cyber and physical worlds extensively, seamlessly, meaningfully. At Princeton, this is being done by combining mathematical foundations, emerging sensing and communication technologies, and integrated systems, and the deploying these in real-world scenarios.
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