Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Listed
-
Employer
-
Field
-
employees and 43,000 students work to create knowledge for a better world. You can find more information about working at NTNU and the application process here . About the position The Language Acquisition
-
in USN’s PhD-program in Ecology within three months of accession in the position. The vacant position is part of a collaboration between the Colour Vision and Retinal Imaging Laboratory headed by Prof
-
allows for studying language behaviour (time-course and quantity of gaze/eye-movements), neuro-physiology of language processing in the brain and neuro-imaging (https://www.ntnu.edu/langdevlab#/view
-
within three months of accession in the position. The vacant position is part of a collaboration between the Colour Vision and Retinal Imaging Laboratory headed by Prof. Rigmor C. Baraas, the Molecular
-
for clinical AI based on patient data from heterogeneous sources notably language/speech-based sources. The activity will focus on the development of a prototype implementation of early warning- and other AI
-
reconstructions of glacier variability for selected areas in Norway. This involves landscape analyses using satellite images before field mapping. The time series will be based upon studies of sediments deposited
-
learning-based image classification approaches. The objective is to quantify landscape changes over decadal timescales, with a particular emphasis on Western Norway. Relevant transformations include
-
landscape analyses using satellite images before field mapping. The time series will be based upon studies of sediments deposited in glacier-fed distal lakes analysed with ultra-high-resolution scanning
-
national and international partners. The PhD project will focus on integrating advanced photogrammetric techniques applied to historical aerial imagery with modern deep learning-based image classification
-
live-cell imaging of mitochondria in plants, algae, and marine metazoa with computational analysis to find the universal principles of mitochondrial motion across these species. The project is part of