Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Listed
-
Employer
-
Field
-
200 people, working in four divisions: Algorithms, AI & Data Science, Software, and Interaction. The atmosphere is collegial and informal. You will join the Human-Centred Computing group
-
generated data sets of different sizes and measuring the environmental impact. This impact can be measured and calculated by our Software Energy Lab, which has multiple test machines with GPUs and AI
-
-efficient LLM following a hardware-software co-design approach that enables real-time computation on resource-constrained devices. Example applications include portable speech understanding and rehabilitation
-
, Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence. The environment fosters truly interdisciplinary research with a great track record of national and international collaboration transferring knowledge across domains
-
, Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence. The environment fosters truly interdisciplinary research with a great track record of national and international collaboration transferring knowledge across domains
-
-house. For this, knowledge of swarm robotics hardware and software is required. You will also work closely together with our VR lab to ensure the creation of comparable virtual worlds in which robots and
-
of the Open Competition Domain Science-M programme (Twenty-one innovative research projects awarded through Open Competition Domain Science-M programme | NWO - https://www.nwo.nl/en/news/twenty-one-innovative
-
contribute to the structural characterization of NS3–inhibitor complexes Process and analyze cryo-EM data using established computational pipelines and structural modeling tools Apply, or develop expertise in
-
are encouraged to submit a research proposal that aligns with UCALL's research programme and encompasses multiple areas of law. Your job Over a period of four years, you will conduct a PhD research under the
-
and AMOC changes at decadal to millennial timescales. This project may include participation in seagoing expeditions. This project is part of the 10-year EMBRACER research programme funded by the Dutch