Corvids calling: understanding the origins of complex communication. BBSRC SWBio DTP PhD studentship 2025 Entry Ref: 5439
About the award
Supervisors
Lead Supervisor Professor Alex Thornton, University of Exeter
Additional Supervisors Dr Andrew King, Swansea University
Dr Neeltje Boogert, University of Exeter
Dr Ines Furtbauer, Swansea University
Location: Penryn Campus, University of Exeter, Exeter, Devon
Up to 34 fully-funded 4-year PhD studentships* available to start in September 2025, across a wide range of bioscience disciplines.
To view projects available, and how to apply, visit the SWBio DTP website.
* Subject to meeting eligibility requirements.
The award:
This project is one of a number that are in competition for funding from the South West Biosciences Doctoral Training Partnership (SWBio DTP).
About:
The BBSRC-funded SWBio DTP involves a partnership of world-renown universities, research institutes and industry, based mainly across the South West and Wales.
This partnership has established international, national and regional scientific networks, and widely recognised research excellence and facilities.
We aim to provide you with outstanding interdisciplinary bioscience research training, underpinned by transformative technologies.
Programme Overview:
You will be recruited to a broad, interdisciplinary project, supported by a multidisciplinary supervisory team, with many cross-institutional projects available. There are also opportunities to:
• apply your research in an industrial setting (DTP CASE studentships).
• undertake research jointly with our core and associate partners (Standard DTP studentships with an associate partner).
• work with other national/international researchers.
• undertake fieldwork.
Our structured training programme will ensure you are well equipped as a bioscience researcher, supporting careers into academia, industry and beyond.
First year
We provide a broad awareness of the fundamental research approaches in life sciences and how they could be applied to real-life situations through:
• two rotation projects - both allied with but in different disciplinary areas related to the PhD project.
• three taught units - training in Statistics, Bioinformatics, coding, experimental design, innovation and understanding the impact of your research.
Of note: You will need to successfully complete the first year to progress into your second year of studies. Also, if you are unable to continue your PhD, an MRes exit route is available upon successful completion of the first year.
Second to fourth years
The remaining years will be more like a conventional PhD, where you will focus on your PhD project.
Project Description
Animals have diverse acoustic communication systems, from the chirping of crickets to the almost infinite complexity of human language, and these systems play a vital role in enabling cooperation and structuring societies. Most attempts to understand the causes of this variation use between-species comparisons. These have examined, for instance, whether social or ecological variables predict characteristics of communication systems, such as whether vocalisations are individually distinctive, or the number of different vocalisations used. However, these comparative, correlational approaches tell us little about the benefits individuals derive from communication and ignore the possibility that benefits vary across different contexts.
An alternative, more powerful approach is to harness within-species variation to understand how and why individuals use different signals to solve diverse challenges. Jackdaws, birds of the large-brained corvid family, provide an ideal system as they live in highly variable social environments, some of their calls are known to be individually distinctive, and they use vocalisations to solve diverse problems. Jackdaw societies centre around long-term, monogamous pairbonds, but pairs are embedded in dynamic social networks within breeding colonies and members of different colonies forage together and form vast winter flocks numbering thousands of individuals. Our established study sites contain thousands of individually recognisable, PIT-tagged jackdaws, providing unique opportunities to understand the development and function of vocal communication across these diverse contexts.
Using a combination of behavioural observations, field experiments, sound recordings and analysis, cutting-edge social network approaches and Artificial Intelligence the PhD will:
(1) Establish the determinants of vocal repertoires across different contexts (e.g. parental care; foraging; roosting). Using machine learning to categorise call types you will test the prediction that ecological contexts involving a wider range of tasks favour greater repertoires.
(2) Determine the development of vocal individuality within and across contexts: longitudinal monitoring will reveal how morphological and developmental influences shape the emergence of distinctive voices.
(3) Test the function of individuality. Using playbacks, you will establish the value of signalling individual identity in negotiating and coordinating different actions involving a diverse number and composition of partners.
(4) Determine how communication structures societies. Using experiments to manipulate the vocal landscape and resource availability you will test how the vocal landscape shapes the structure of social networks.
Bringing together the supervisory team’s expertise in cognition and communication, collective behaviour and artificial intelligence, this PhD will help transform our understanding of how and why diverse communication systems arise in the natural world.
Funding and eligibility
Information about funding and eligibility >>
A limited number of funded-studentships are available for international students.
Supporting Equality, Diversity and Inclusion (EDI)
We support inclusive and flexible work environments, and welcome applications from all backgrounds and communities.
Our SWBio DTP EDI statement >>
How we support our diverse student cohort >>
PhD study adjustments and support >>
DTP virtual support events
We have events available to help you with deciding on a bioscience PhD, and support with applications and interviews.
Entry requirements
Academic criteria
Applicants for a studentship must have obtained, or be about to obtain, a First or Upper Second Class UK Honours degree, or the equivalent qualifications gained outside the UK, in an appropriate area of science or technology. Applicants with a Lower Second Class degree will be considered if they also have a Master’s degree or have significant relevant research or non-academic experience.
In addition, due to the strong mathematical component of the taught course in the first year and the quantitative emphasis in our projects, quantitative/mathematical experience is needed. This can be demonstrated through one or more of the following:
- Undertaking units as part of your degree that have a significant quantitative/mathematical component*
- Maths or Physics A-level (grade B and above)
*Significant mathematical component examples include; maths, statistics, bioinformatics.
Applicants must ensure they highlight their quantitative/mathematical background within their application and to upload any supporting evidence.
To support accessibility to PhD training opportunities, these studentships are only available to applicants that have not previously obtained or about to obtain a PhD degree (or equivalent).
Language requirements
If your first language is not English, you will need to meet the minimum English requirements for the programme. Further information about these English requirements >>
We ask that the language requirements are met by 1st June at the latest, to allow adequate time to obtain any necessary documentation to allow you to study in the UK. Further information about documentation required >>
How to apply
Please be aware you will be asked to upload the following documents:
- CV
- Letter of application outlining your academic interests, prior research experience and reasons for wishing to undertake the project. Please indicate your preferred project choice if applying for multiple BBSRC SWBio DTP projects.
- Personal Statement
- Transcript(s) giving full details of subjects studied and grades/marks obtained. This should be an interim transcript if you are still studying.
- Two academic referees - see information below about references.
- If you are not a national of a majority English-speaking country you will need to submit evidence of your proficiency in English (see entry requirements above)
The closing date for applications is midnight on Monday, 11 December 2024.
Interviews will be held between 3-14 February 2025.
Reference Information
You will be asked to submit two references as part of the application process. If you are not able to upload your reference documents with your application please ensure you provide details of your referees. If you provide contact details of referees only, we will not expect receipt of references until after the shortlisting stage. Your referees should not be from the prospective supervisory team.
If you are shortlisted for interview, please ensure that your two academic referees email their references to pgrapplicants@exeter.ac.uk, 7 days prior to the interview dates. Please note that we will not be contacting referees to request references, you must arrange for them to be submitted to us by the deadline.
References should be submitted by your referees to us directly in the form of a letter. Referees must email their references to us from their institutional email accounts. We cannot accept references from personal/private email accounts, unless it is a scanned document on institutional headed paper and signed by the referee.
If you have any general enquiries about the application process please email pgrapplicants@exeter.ac.uk.
Project-specific queries should be directed to the primary supervisor.
Selection Process:
Information relating to the selection process can be found via the following link https://www.swbio.ac.uk/programme/selection-process/
Please note that nomination by a project supervisor therefore does not guarantee the award of a studentship.
Data Protection
During the application process, the University may need to make certain disclosures of your personal data to third parties to be able to administer your application, carry out interviews and select candidates. These are not limited to, but may include disclosures to:
- the selection panel and/or management board or equivalent of the relevant programme,
which is likely to include staff from one or more other HEIs. - administrative staff at one or more other HEIs participating in the relevant programme.
Such disclosures will always be kept to the minimum amount of personal data required for the specific purpose. Your sensitive personal data (relating to disability and race/ethnicity) will not be disclosed without your explicit consent.
Summary
Application deadline: | 11th December 2024 |
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Value: | Tuition fees and an annual stipend allowance at Research Council rates, currently £19,237 per year for 2024-25 |
Duration of award: | per year |
Contact: PGR Admissions | pgrapplicants@exeter.ac.uk |