Laboratoire d'Informatique de Grenoble
The Laboratoire d'Informatique de Grenoble is the largest research laboratory of Informatics in Grenoble, France. It was created 1 January 2007, as the result of a union of the 24 research teams of the previous IMAG Institute and the INRIA Rhône-Alpes.
The scientific project of the LIG is "ambient and sustainable IT". The goal is to leverage the complementary nature and recognised quality of the 23 research teams of the LIG to contribute to fundamental aspects of the discipline and to create a synergy between the conceptual, technological and societal challenges that surround this theme.
The Grenoble Informatics Laboratory is a laboratory of quite some scale, the academic partners being:
The CNRS,
Grenoble INP,
Inria Grenoble Rhône-Alpes,
the Université Joseph Fourier,
the Université Pierre-Mendès-France,
the Université Stendhal.
The LIG is formed by about 500 people:
- 41% of PhD students,
- 26% of teacher-researchers,
- 14% of post-doc, invited, contracts,
- 10% of full-time researchers,
- 9% of administrative and technical staff.
History
The LIG is under the joint supervision of the université Grenoble-Alpes, the Institut polytechnique de Grenoble, and the CNRS. It is a partner of the INRIA.Under the impetus of Brigitte Plateau, this laboratory is the result of the amalgamation of five former laboratories of the Institute of Computer Science and [Applied Mathematics of Grenoble] of Grenoble-Rhône-Alpes.
In 2016, the laboratory, moved from Rue de la Piscine to the IMAG building on Avenue Centrale, by the Laboratoire Jean-Kuntzmann and the VERIMAG laboratory.
Research Domains
LIG research covers a very large range of domains in Informatics. Topics includes for instance Software Engineering, Formal Methods, Multimedia, Natural Language Processing, Databases, Knowledge representation, Geographic Information Systems Virtual reality, Multi-agent systems, Distributed systems, Information systems, Quantum Computation, etc.Research Teams
The list of LIG teams is as follows:- ADELE: Environments and tools for Industrial Software Engineering;
- AMA: Learning: models and algorithms;
- CAPP: Calculations algorithms programs and proofs;
- CTRL-A: Control for safe Autonomic computing systems;
- DRAKKAR: Networks and Multimedia;
- E-MOTION: Geometry and Probability for Movement and Action;
- EXMO: Computer mediated exchange of structured knowledge;
- GETALP: Study Group for Automatic Translation and Automated Processing of Languages and Speech;
- HAwAI: Human Aware Artificial Intelligence
- HADAS: Heterogenous autonomous distributed data services;
- IIHM: Human-machine interaction engineering;
- MESCAL: Middleware efficiently scalable;
- MeTAH: Method and technology in human learning;
- MOES: Multi-Programming and Distributed Resource Scheduling for Interactive Simulation Applications;
- MRIM: Multimedia Information Modeling and Research;
- MULTICOM: Participatory design, ergonomics, uses for interactive systems. Tools and methods;
- POP ART: Programming languages, operating systems, parallelism & aspects for real-time;
- PRIMA: Perception, recognition and integration for business modeling;
- SARDES: Architecture and construction of distributed software infrastructures;
- SIGMA: Information Systems - Adaptive Engineering and Modeling;
- STEAMER: Spatio-temporal information, adaptability, multimedia and knowledge representation;
- VASCO: Validation of Systems, Components and Software Objects;
- VASY: Validation of systems;
- WAM: Web adaptation and multimedia.