Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Listed
-
Category
-
Employer
- ;
- Cranfield University
- University of Cambridge
- ; University of Birmingham
- University of Nottingham
- University of Warwick
- ; Aston University
- ; Brunel University London
- ; Swansea University
- ; The University of Edinburgh
- ; University of Cambridge
- ; University of Warwick
- AALTO UNIVERSITY
- Heriot Watt University
- Imperial College London
- The University of Edinburgh
- University of Birmingham
- University of Exeter
- University of London
- 9 more »
- « less
-
Field
-
Aviation by 2050. This exciting doctoral project, in collaboration with Rolls-Royce, will develop innovative computer vision methods which when combined with optical flow velocimetry will enable imaging
-
This PhD project is at the intersection of electromagnetism, numerical methods, and high-performance parallel computing, with application towards the design and optimisation of integrated circuits
-
-3413 ), 4-Limited flight data for adaptive methods (doi.org/10.1016/j.geits.2022.100028 ), and 5- Failure to use a robust state estimator to increase robustness of EMS in eVTOL, have not been filled by
-
tackling the above challenges with novel system designs and tailored AI/ML based methods. Candidate’s profile A First Class Bachelors degree and/or Masters degree in a relevant subject (computer
-
on health and use economic methods to evaluate relative costs and benefits. This may include use of health impact assessment methods, statistical analysis of secondary data sources to estimate health impacts
-
to work with an international team on developing cutting-edge novel demographic, statistical and computational methods in estimating, modelling and forecasting measures of health, well-being, and human
-
procedures. These systems combine preoperative planning and intraoperative measurements into a visual interface, improving surgical precision and outcomes. However, current navigation methods have significant
-
and Technology (CST) at the University of Cambridge. The goal of this PhD programme is to launch one "deceptive by design" project that combines the perspectives of human-computer interaction (HCI) and
-
studies and interactive AI systems. This position will be funded based on an initial 2-year contract + 2 years extension. The key idea is to apply theories, models, and methods from psychology to improve
-
the combined themes of human-computer interaction and critical computing. The lab will be exploring the notion of "deceptive by design" on all fronts: social identity cues in the design of LLM-based chatbots