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- NTNU - Norwegian University of Science and Technology
- NTNU Norwegian University of Science and Technology
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algorithm controversy game. Design Studies, 91, 101245. Hicks, B., Kitto, K., Payne, L., & Buckingham Shum, S. (2022). Thinking with causal models: A visual formalism for collaboratively crafting assumptions
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environment in Norway, and offer a wide range of theoretical and applied IT programmes of study at all levels. Our subject areas include hardware, algorithms, visual computing, AI, databases, software
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and applied IT programmes of study at all levels. Our subject areas include hardware, algorithms, visual computing, AI, databases, software engineering, information systems, learning technology, HCI
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/Machine Learning (AI-ML) approaches to meeting this challenge. Possible topics include, but are not limited to: storylines for plausible narratives of regional climate change, novel algorithms for rare
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for plausible narratives of regional climate change, novel algorithms for rare event sampling or ensemble boosting, and the development and use of hybrid climate models combining physics-based and ML components
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develop new deep learning algorithms for spatio-temporal medical image analysis with particular focus on learning from limited labelled data. General information about the position. The position is a fixed
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the PhD has been awarded at the latest within 5 months after the closing date for applications. The applicant must have good programming skills, excellent knowledge of algorithms, numerical methods, and
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algorithms for realistic settings in terms of data and computing resources and collaborates to address major challenges in important applications including marine domain and neuroscience. The candidate is
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IT programmes of study at all levels. Our subject areas include hardware, algorithms, visual computing, AI, databases, software engineering, information systems, learning technology, HCI, CSCW, IT
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, algorithms, visual computing, AI, databases, software engineering, information systems, learning technology, HCI, CSCW, IT operations and applied data processing. The Department has groups in both Trondheim