Research Intern - Microsoft Research Special Projects

Microsoft Microsoft · Big Tech · Redmond, WA +4 · Applied Sciences

Research intern focused on advancing Large Language Model (LLM) capabilities, specifically in areas like memory representations, retrieval methods (e.g., GraphRAG), handling temporal changes, ambiguity, and hallucination detection/mitigation.

What you'd actually do

  1. Research Interns put inquiry and theory into practice.
  2. Alongside fellow doctoral candidates and some of the world’s best researchers, Research Interns learn, collaborate, and network for life.
  3. Research Interns not only advance their own careers, but they also contribute to exciting research and development strides.
  4. During the 12-week internship, Research Interns are paired with mentors and expected to collaborate with other Research Interns and researchers, present findings, and contribute to the vibrant life of the community.
  5. Research internships are available in all areas of research, and are offered year-round, though they typically begin in the summer.

Skills

Required

  • PhD program enrollment
  • LLM-focused projects experience
  • Python programming

Nice to have

  • Programming skills, including ability to prototype ideas
  • Experience working with complex datasets to solve challenging problems
  • Demonstrated ability to work independently and make meaningful progress in ambiguous or rapidly evolving research environments
  • Willingness to embrace knowledge/techniques outside of your field of research
  • Familiarity with knowledge graphs and graph machine learning
  • Knowledge of probability and statistics
  • First-author publication in a top-tier conference or journal

What the JD emphasized

  • PhD program in Statistics, Computer Science, Linguistics, Physics, Operations Research, or a related technical field
  • at least 1 year of hands-on experience working on LLM-focused projects
  • at least 1 year of experience coding in Python
  • minimum of two reference letters
  • at least one publication as a first author in a top-tier conference or journal

Other signals

  • LLM memory representations
  • retrieval methods
  • temporal changes in memory
  • ambiguity
  • hallucination