Summer School on Informatics Education Research
Informatics and Other Disciplines
Best Practices in Education Award
2022 - Educating the Workforce for the Digital Transformation
2020 - Lifelong Education and Talent Gap in Informatics
2018 - Transforming Informatics Education
2017 - Informatics Education Available to All
2016 - Informatics Education in Primary and Secondary Schools
2015 - Informatics Education in Primary and Secondary Schools
2014 - Informatics Education in Primary and Secondary Schools
2013 - Informatics Education in Primary and Secondary Schools
Minerva Informatics Equality Award
Best Practices in Supporting Women
2025 - Female Careers at All Stages
2024 - Female Careers at All Stages
2023 - Female Careers at All Stages
2022 - Careers of Female Faculty
2021 - Recruiting and Supporting Female Students
2020 - Careers of Female PhD and Postdoc Researchers
2019 - Careers of Female Faculty
2018 - Recruiting and Supporting Female Students
IRISA
TAP is a joint project between CNRS-IPAL-IRISA and NUS (National University of Singapore), funded by the DGA and its Singaporean counterpart.
Over the last 60 to 70 years, programming has dominated computer science, involving the capture of intentions and code production. Formal specifications have gained prominence thanks to advances in system modeling and design, allowing for more precise goal capture. Despite these advancements, software engineers are often reluctant to write formal specifications. This leads to the absence of formal declarations of intent for large software systems, making debugging and error correction difficult. In the absence of formal intent capture, testing and analysis have been used to develop reliable codebases. Testing aims to achieve broader behavioral coverage, employing test oracles. Fuzzing approaches have become significant over the past decade. However, achieving functional correctness of software without in-depth formal requirements remains a challenging goal.
Recent advances in automatic code generation from large language models (LLMs) provide a new perspective. It is now conceivable to program based on natural language specifications using LLM code generation, suggesting that auto-coding is feasible. This raises the issue of the correctness and security of code automatically generated by LLMs and the conditions under which this code can be trusted.
The TAP Project focuses specifically on these aspects. The project aims to identify vulnerabilities in LLM-generated code, analyze and classify these vulnerabilities, and determine if certain types of vulnerabilities are more common in LLM-generated code compared to human-written code. The project also seeks to automate the correction of these vulnerabilities and improve LLMs concerning code vulnerabilities.
The DiverSE team’s main objective for this project is to identify vulnerabilities in code generated by LLMs. To achieve this objective, we will set up a system capable of automatically generating datasets of vulnerabilities. This will be achieved by using the web catalogues available for vulnerabilities and by modelling these vulnerabilities in such a way as to integrate them seamlessly into a test tool, enabling us to analyse the code and libraries generated by LLM. The target languages will primarily be C and Java, due to their widespread use and in order to maximise the impact of our work.
In this context, the DiverSE team (in close collaboration with the IPAL laboratory and the DGA) is recruiting a post-doctoral researcher on a fixed-term contract for a period of 13 months, extendable (depending on experience) to 26 to 36 months, who will be under the scientific and technical responsibility of permanent members of the team involved in the project. This person will be responsible for carrying out and supervising research into methods and techniques related to the DiverSE objectives set out above. Synergies with other work carried out by the team will also be explored and exploited. The results of our work will be used by our NUS partners in Singapore.
Main tasks:
Secondary tasks:
The position may involve travel in France and abroad, including air travel.
IRISA (Research Institute of Computer Science and Random Systems) is one of France’s largest research laboratories in computer science and information technology, with over 850 members. Organized into seven scientific departments, IRISA focuses on key areas such as bioinformatics, system security, software architectures, virtual reality, big data analysis, and artificial intelligence.
IRISA is part of a dynamic regional ecosystem, recognized for its expertise through international scientific collaborations. Focused on the future of computer science, IRISA plays a key role in digital transformation, cybersecurity, health, environment, transportation, robotics, energy, and AI.
The DiverSE research team specializes in software engineering techniques for building reliable and efficient applications, focusing on areas such as cybersecurity and LLMs. The team consists of about 15 permanent members (Inria and CNRS researchers, university lecturers, including 3 members of the French University Institute), 15 PhD students, several engineers, and a DGA associate engineer. DiverSE is internationally recognized and maintains strong ties with global, national, and local industries. The team also prides itself on a friendly and engaging work atmosphere.
The position is located in a sector covered by the protection of scientific and technical potential (PPST), and therefore requires, in accordance with the regulations, that your arrival be authorised by the competent authority of the MESR.
Project Highlights:
This project offers unique opportunities due to its application domain, ambition, international network, and potential impact. It lies at the core of DiverSE’s activities and involves collaboration with a dynamic team in Singapore.
Ambition:
You will contribute to a worldwide open-source project. In an era where source code security is a strategic concern, TAP aims to address this challenge directly. This project could also lay the groundwork for stronger collaboration between DiverSE and NUS, enhancing national, European, and global sovereignty and security in software engineering, AI, LLMs, and cybersecurity.
Network:
TAP involves frequent interactions with partners from NUS and IPAL. Visits to Singapore may be arranged based on your preferences. The project offers opportunities to engage with various research, innovation, and industry transfer projects within and beyond the DiverSE team. After the project, you’ll be one of the (many) alumni of the DiverSE team, most of whom are still in touch.
Impact:
The exponential growth of LLM usage for code generation ensures significant impact potential. Automating the securing of LLM-generated code addresses a pressing global need, with substantial cybersecurity implications.
Monthly salary depending on experience, from €3,417 gross (€2,746 net) to €4,618 gross (€3,732 net)
Campus de Beaulieu, IRISA/Inria Rennes
Building 12
263 Avenue du Général Leclerc
35042 RENNES Cedex, France

Adapted image from nicepng.com
We represent ca. 200 university departments and research institutes in Informatics from all over Europe.
Uniting academia, industry, and policymakers, spanning over 30 countries, to advance Informatics education and research for positive societal change in Europe.
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