Student Assistant/ HiWi (m/f/d)
The Haptic Intelligence Department, the Neuromechanics of Movement Group, and the Organizational Leadership and Diversity Group at the institute’s Stuttgart site are looking for a Student Assistant/HiWi (m/f/div) to support their collaborative research project on the biomechanics and perception of walking in different shoes.
About MPI-IS
The Max Planck Institute for Intelligent Systems (MPI-IS) conducts research to advance intelligent systems that perceive, learn, and interact. Through fundamental research across computational, physical, and social dimensions, they shape artificial intelligence and robotics to advance knowledge and benefit society.
About the Project
This project is a collaboration between the Haptic Intelligence Department, the Neuromechanics of Movement Group, and the Organizational Leadership and Diversity Group of the Max Planck Institute for Intelligent Systems. It's aimed at understanding of how people walk in different types of shoes and how others judge walking styles based on specific criteria.
The team has designed a research study to investigate these two topics. Study participants will be asked to walk in two different pairs of shoes (high heels and comfortable flat shoes) while kinematic, kinetic, and muscle-activation data will be collected using motion-capture systems, an instrumented treadmill, and surface electromyography (EMG) sensors. A group of observers will separately be asked to watch short videos of people walking and rate specific walking characteristics.
This study provides an opportunity to reshape the conversation around heel-wearing and its broader implications, connecting biomechanical findings to meaningful real-world contexts.
Roles & Responsibilities
The student assistant will support various phases of the study. Core responsibilities may include:
- Assisting with motion-camera setup and study preparations
- Helping run walking trials in the lab, including placing reflective markers and EMG sensors on participants
- Supporting survey administration and observer testing sessions
- Assisting with participant recruitment, consenting, and debriefing
- Organizing qualitative responses and observational ratings for later analysis
- Annotating and organizing motion-capture and EMG data
The concrete position and tasks are subject to discussion with interested candidates. Selected candidates can start working as soon as they are hired.
Education & Experience
The team is looking for a talented student pursuing a bachelor’s or master's degree in human-centered engineering design, biomechanics, biomedical engineering, applied statistics, physiology, or related fields.
Applicants should
- Have high motivation
- Have good oral and written communication skills in English; German language skills would be helpful but are not required
- Be pursuing a bachelor’s or master’s degree
- Be currently enrolled at a university in Germany
- Want to work in an international and interdisciplinary research environment
- Be able to work on-site at the Max Planck Institute for intelligent Systems in Stuttgart, Germany
The team is especially interested in applicants who have
- Experience with wearable sensors (e.g., motion capture, EMG)
- Experience in participating in or conducting human-subject experiments
- Experience with eye-tracking systems
- Interest in human movement
- Interest in and/or experience with the topics of diversity and inclusion
The Offer
Student assistants without a bachelor degree will be paid €13.80 per hour. Student assistants with a bachelor degree will be paid €14.40 per hour. Working time up to 20 hours per week in lecture period, and up to 39 hours per week in lecture-free period.
Application
To apply, please submit a résumé, a short motivation letter describing why you are interested in this position, and optionally other documentation to demonstrate your background. Please prepare these documents in English and upload them as one PDF file to the application portal.
If you have questions about this job opportunity, please email Dr. Vani Hiremath Sundaram at vsun@is.mpg.de.
The posting is open until filled.
The Max Planck Society is committed to increasing the number of individuals with disabilities in its workforce and therefore encourages applications from such qualified individuals. The Max Planck Society strives for gender equality and diversity. Furthermore, the Max Planck Society seeks to increase the number of women in its workforce in those areas where they are underrepresented and therefore explicitly encourages women to apply.