Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Listed
-
Category
-
Program
-
Employer
- University of Groningen
- European Space Agency
- Wageningen University and Research Center
- University of Twente
- Erasmus University Rotterdam
- Leiden University
- AcademicTransfer
- Utrecht University
- KNAW
- CWI
- Nature Careers
- ; Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics
- Eindhoven University of Technology
- 3 more »
- « less
-
Field
-
, encryption/decryption and compression; use of microelectronics devices (including COTS); implementation, inference, verification and validation of algorithms** on processing hardware platforms for space
-
to microeconomics (individual choice, aggregate supply, and demand, equilibrium), econometrics (endogenous variables, choice modeling), statistics and probability, Bayesian modelling, machine learning, and deep
-
and/or Python. Experience in, and aptitude for, complex statistical modelling (inc. mixed effects regression models and/or Bayesian statistics). Excellent written and spoken English. Desirable (traits
-
historical data from Apollo and Luna missions. Compare mineralogical and chemical properties of regolith from different landing sites and infer likely toxicity profiles. Risk Identification & Mitigation
-
they differ between these languages? How do these meanings emerge, considering the speaker’s intentions, the addressee’s inference process, and the shared social context of both interlocutors? This project
-
the speaker’s intentions, the addressee’s inference process, and the shared social context of both interlocutors? This project takes an experimental approach to socio-pragmatics (see Van de Velde, et al., 2022’s
-
inform pricing and reimbursement decisions. Apply and refine causal inference methods for estimating treatment effects from observational data, such as patient registries and electronic health records
-
subject of the dissertation is highly topical, and includes all kinds of topics that are high on the econometrics agenda, such as high-dimensional inference. Nibbering also demonstrates relevant interesting
-
the door”, must expresses an obligation, while in “I must have left my notebook upstairs”, must expresses an inference. This ambiguity occurs in half of the world’s languages. How confusing is this ambiguity
-
an inference. This ambiguity occurs in half of the world’s languages. How confusing is this ambiguity, and how do children resolve it? While previous studies approached these questions by annotating large