COOKIES: By using this website you agree that we can place Google Analytics Cookies on your device for performance monitoring. |
AI4ER CDT
Add to your list(s)
Send you e-mail reminders
Further detail
The Centre for Doctoral Training (CDT) in the Application of Artificial Intelligence to the study of Environmental Risks (AI4ER, https://ai4er-cdt.esc.cam.ac.uk/) trains researchers to develop and apply leading edge computational approaches to address critical global environmental challenges by exploiting vast, diverse, and often untapped environmental datasets. Each year, it admits a cohort of 10-12 students after a highly competitive admissions process. Admitted students are fully funded for four years of study at Cambridge. During their first year, they take a variety of foundational courses in the areas of environmental risk and AI, and in the last three months, undertake an MRes research project. In the subsequent three years, they become affiliated to one of the CDT ’s 13 member departments and complete a PhD in that department, under the supervision of a faculty member in that department, typically with additional co-supervision. Some students will additionally be affiliated to the British Antarctic Survey. You can find more information about the CDT on our website (https://ai4er-cdt.esc.cam.ac.uk/) and updates on activities through our twitter account (https://twitter.com/AI4ER_CDT). If you have a question about this list, please contact: Adriana Dote. If you have a question about a specific talk, click on that talk to find its organiser. 0 upcoming talks and 134 talks in the archive. Please see above for contact details for this list. |
Other listsEconomics & Policy seminars Martin Centre, 37th Annual Series, Architecture Cambridge University Railway ClubOther talksRefugees and Migration Using Inclusive Design to Focus on User Experience (UX) Random Feature Expansions for Deep Gaussian Processes The Partition of India and Migration Carers and Careers: The Impact of Caring on Academic Careers Immigration and Freedom Protein Folding, Evolution and Interactions Symposium The role of myosin VI in connexin 43 gap junction accretion Speculations about homological mirror symmetry for affine hypersurfaces A polyfold lab report Mesembs - Actual and Digital |