Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
of the Flemish VLAIO Flux50 SBO-project "NudgeFlow: The next generation of residential ventilation - tweaking the natural air flow with distributed components", we are offering a PhD position focused on developing
-
The research group Mechanics of Materials and Structures at Ghent University (UGent-MMS) has 4 vacancies for PhD and postdoc research in the field of fibre-reinforced composites. The vacancies
-
-house database of experimental real-world data enabling large-scale validation of developed algorithms. Wind turbine drivetrains are critical components, and their failures can lead to significant
-
of nanofabricated sample supports and tracking algorithms for 5D electron diffraction (5DED). EMAT is one of the leading electron microscopy centers in the world and has a vast expertise in both fundamental and
-
off-the-shelf sensors and the development of resilient algorithms that combine first-principles modeling with modern machine learning techniques. The goal is to push the boundaries of robust perception
-
and Saeys teams. In this research project you will develop and apply algorithms to link clinical phenotypes of metastasis to molecular phenotypes in mouse models. It is known that metastases exhibit
-
Networks, and ICT Services & Applications. Your role Design intelligent agent architectures leveraging large language models (LLMs), planning algorithms, and secure transaction protocols tailored
-
. Real-World Validation: Deploy and benchmark your algorithms on our autonomous vehicle, mobile robots, and UAV testbeds. You will: Publish in CVPR/ICCV/ECCV, NeurIPS/ICLR, INFOCOM/ISIT and leading IEEE
-
on ML algorithms for lifetime estimation (GNNs). We are part of the Acoustics & Vibration Research Group itself part of the Department of Mechanical Engineering, Faculty of Engineering of the Vrije
-
Institute) Besides the project leaders, the Dynamigs team includes several senior and postdoc researchers. As a part of this project, you will conduct quantitative research on demographic behaviour