Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
. FEBRI, the graduate school and research institute of the Faculty of Economics and Business has one position in the field of Business and ecosystems innovation available. Project description In
-
of “the countryside” for both urban and rural residents. The PhD position is part of the NWO-funded research programme Fertile Soils, which conducts inter- and trans-disciplinary research into making relationships
-
will design, implement, and evaluate, within the framework of Design-Based Research, a professional development programme that supports STEM instructors in using AI effectively and critically in
-
attention and the introduction of the Green Deal on Sustainable Healthcare, there is an urgent need to transition towards a more sustainable and circular healthcare sector. The project consists of two main
-
the following central research question: how can we design human-AI collaboration to mitigate biases and foster equitable decision-making? To answer this question, the research will focus on three key areas
-
(GGSL). The GGSL offers a training program to help carry out this research. Your training program will be tailored to your interests, and needs for development. During your appointment, you will publish
-
supervisors, you will conduct independent scientific research resulting in a dissertation. You will be accommodated at the Groningen Graduate School of Law (GGSL). The GGSL offers a training program to help
-
of Eindhoven. Evolution is an all-purpose problem solver, which researchers mimic in the laboratory to engineer tailor-made (bio)molecules that aid us in combating diseases and in realizing a sustainable economy
-
unclear strategies for bias mitigation limit its effectiveness in practice. This PhD project addresses the following central research question: how can we design human-AI collaboration to mitigate biases
-
materials, to aid design of novel more energy-efficient processing routes. The development of these digital twins requires reliable and predictive models for microstructure formation during steel processing