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Join the Centre for Quantum & Technology Theory Full-time, fixed-term position at our Hawthorn campus Scholarship stipend About the Role The Centre for Quantum Technology Theory (CQTT) invites
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mechanisms of online media platforms by granting users full control over their sensitive information. Innovation. To meet users' varying privacy demands, this project put forward a graph-based user
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deep learning theory, Bayesian statistics, and generative modelling, this work will advance our understanding of both the capabilities and vulnerabilities of modern AI systems. This will have potential
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). "Statistical field theory applied to complex networks” "Quantum geometrogenesis – Graph theoretic approaches to building spacetime” web page For further details or to discuss alternative project arrangements
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Full-time onshore enrolment Strong background in fluid-structure interaction or in systems and control Solid background in mathematics (theories in both ordinary and partial differential equations
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through theory and simulation and/or experimental design and testing; developing new image reconstruction algorithms for providing more information with less radiation; and applying our techniques
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-preserving trustworthy distributed machine learning. In this research, the successful candidates will focus on mathematical backgrounds involved in differential privacy to devise novel scalable approaches
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These scholarships are funded by the Australian Research Council (3) and the University of Adelaide (1) to support 4 full-time PhD students who are undertaking research in the field of battery recycling: Project 1 (2 PhD students): Cost-Efficient Direct Recycling for Metal Oxide Cathode...
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@rmit.edu.au Please send your CV to akram.hourani@rmit.edu.au Required Skills: Programming and simulation: strong experience in Python or MATLAB. Mathematical modelling: probability, optimization, or multi-agent
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different from when core theories about the role of media in society were established. We are awash in data about clicks, views, and likes, but we lack evidence about what people now do with media, how