Applied Scientist - Llm, Alexa

Amazon Amazon · Big Tech · Cambridge, MA, United Kingdom · Machine Learning Science

Applied Scientist role focused on training and deploying LLMs for conversational AI systems like Alexa. The role involves end-to-end ownership from research and algorithm development to production deployment and inference infrastructure.

What you'd actually do

  1. develop innovative solutions to complex problems to extend the functionalities of conversational assistants.
  2. use your technical expertise to research and implement novel algorithms and modelling solutions in collaboration with other scientists and engineers.
  3. analyze customer behaviors and define metrics to enable the identification of actionable insights and measure improvements in customer experience.
  4. communicate results and insights to both technical and non-technical audiences through written reports, presentations and external publications.
  5. drive innovation in evaluating new product experiences while discovering novel approaches to enhance model capabilities and enrich customer interactions.

Skills

Required

  • PhD, or a Master's degree and experience in CS, CE, ML or related field
  • Experience programming in Java, C++, Python or related language
  • Experience in building machine learning models for business application

Nice to have

  • Experience in patents or publications at top-tier peer-reviewed conferences or journals
  • Experience in any of the following areas: algorithms and data structures, parsing, numerical optimization, data mining, parallel and distributed computing, high-performance computing

What the JD emphasized

  • training the Large Language Models
  • serving them in production systems
  • own solutions end-to-end
  • research and implement novel algorithms
  • building low-latency inference infrastructure

Other signals

  • training large language models
  • serving them in production systems
  • own solutions end-to-end
  • research and implement novel algorithms
  • building low-latency inference infrastructure