The Centre for Integrated Sensing and Communication Enabling Cognitive Cities (ISAC³) at the University of Glasgow is a multidisciplinary research centre focused on next-generation communication systems for cognitive and sustainable cities. The centre brings together expertise from engineering, computing, and artificial intelligence to develop intelligent, adaptive, and data-driven technologies.
Our work covers areas such as integrated sensing and communications (ISAC), 6G wireless systems, artificial intelligence, digital twins, network optimisation, and reconfigurable intelligent surfaces (RIS). We focus on developing algorithms, system models, and experimental platforms that enable efficient, scalable, and intelligent communication networks. We are developing pathways for postgraduate researchers through PhD programmes, with progression opportunities into postdoctoral, academic, and industry roles in telecommunications, AI, and smart infrastructure.
We are committed to equality, diversity, and inclusion by maintaining a supportive and collaborative research environment that values different perspectives and encourages participation from diverse backgrounds. We are interested in engaging with the DiveIn CDT community because of its strong focus on interdisciplinary collaboration and diversity-led research. This aligns closely with our vision of bringing together sensing, communication, computing, and AI to address real-world challenges.
We are particularly interested in working with CDTs to co-develop research and support interdisciplinary training. Our research focuses on challenges such as scalable ISAC systems, AI-driven network optimisation, RIS-enabled environments, and digital twin-based adaptive networks. We aim to collaborate with academic and industry partners across communications, AI, and computing.
We can offer postgraduate researchers access to simulation tools, lab and hardware facilities, mentorship, and opportunities to work on impactful, real-world research problems within an interdisciplinary environment.