899 search results for “data” in the Student website
-
Technology alone won't save us from the climate crisis
If European countries rely solely on technological advances, they won't be able to limit global heating to 1.5 degrees. Households will also need to change their lifestyles. This 'inconvenient truth' is the result of calculations done by industrial ecologist Stephanie Cap. ‘It's not a popular message,…
-
Why take the AI & Society minor? These students explain
The interdisciplinary AI & Society minor of Leiden University brings together students and lecturers from a wide range of disciplines. Together they look at the impact of AI on society. Students are enthusiastic about this merging of worlds.
-
Cheating graphs: a lesson in statistics without arithmetic
Missing legends, illogical connections or three-dimensional graphs. There are many ways in which data can deceive. Five students took up the fight against misleading statistics. Their lesson series can now be found online.
-
Radio astronomers bypass disturbing Earth's atmosphere with new calibration technique
An international team of researchers led by astronomers from Leiden University (the Netherlands) has produced the first sharp radio maps of the universe at low frequencies. Thanks to a new calibration technique, they bypassed the disturbances of the Earth's ionosphere. They used the new method to study…
-
How language reveals what you're really saying: 'Interesting if it's language-independent'
In a conversation, you provide all sorts of information to the listener. For example, you can indicate that you're certain about something, or that you heard it through someone else. Associate Professor Jenneke van der Wal has been awarded a Vici grant to investigate whether the way people do this is…
-
Why the world is quantum
During the Bachelor Honours Class ‘The world is quantum’, students from various disciplines learned about the rules of nature on the smallest scale: quantum mechanics. What opportunities and dangers do they see for their field of study?
-
Parenting choices important in transmission of extremism
Do children growing up in a jihadist or right-wing extremist household develop the same extremist views as their parents?
-
‘Hoogsensitiviteit is geen klinische diagnose, maar een persoonlijkheidskenmerk dat je kunt benutten’
Do you often feel drained after a day at the office? The new SPS Monitor measures how sensitive you are to various stimuli. Psychologist Véronique de Gucht developed the questionnaire. 'I want to demystify high sensitivity.'
-
MODIFED: Morphosyntactic Dialect Feature Detection Workshop
Workshop
-
'ALICE': Understanding SLURM: Simplifying High-Performance Computing
Workshop
-
Deep Learning for Beginners: How to Make a Computer Think like a Human
Workshop Series
-
The Use of Artificial Intelligence Technologies for Military Purposes
Lecture
-
The Leiden Dialectology Workshop Series (5)
Workshop Series
-
SAILS Lunch Time Seminar
Lecture
-
Career College Working in Consultancy
Career and apply for jobs
-
Florence Nightingale Colloquium
Lecture, colloquium
-
Three different perspectives on how the online world has fundamentally changed the way we live our lives
In the ESOF2022 mini-symposium organized by the Social Resilience & Security programme, international experts with a background in psychology, philosophy, and law discussed how the online world is related to adolescent mental health issues, moral and emotional awareness and children’s rights. In three…
-
Methodology & Statistics Alumni meet students in Psychology
Alumni event, Career
-
The Answer to Inequality is in the Past
Lecture
-
CCLS Seminar
Lecture, Seminar
-
LIBC SYLVIUS Lecture
Lecture
-
Seminar: POPNET Connects with Rense Corten
Lecture
-
Seminar: POPNET Connects with Fariba Karimi
Lecture
-
Political Social Networks in Indonesia Workshop
Workshop
- Responsible Extended Reality (XR) Workshop
-
The Leiden Dialectology Workshop Series (2)
Workshop Series
-
Multi-Layer Models and Activation Functions Workshop
Workshop Series
-
First photo of black hole at the heart of our Galaxy
Finally we know for sure that there is a black hole at the centre of our own galaxy. Today, astronomers unveiled the first ever photo of Sagittarius A*, a super-massive object at the centre of the Milky Way. This picture could only be taken thanks to the cooperation of telescopes worldwide.
-
SAILS event: Showcasing AI Research @ Humanities
Conference, Mini symposium
-
SAILS Lunch Time Seminar Sustainability
Lecture
-
Can Generative AI Generate Culture?
Debate
-
Adriaan Gerbrands Lecture by Jason De León
Lecture, Adriaan Gerbrands Lecture
-
Seminar: POPNET Connects with with Naja Hulvej Rod
Lecture
-
LUCDH Lunchtime Speaker Series: Digital Humanities for Contemporary Policy Research - the Case of China
Lecture
-
CMGI Brown Bag Seminar
Lecture, CMGI Brown Bag Seminar
-
Career Talk with Maurien Olsthoorn
Debate, Career Talk
-
Alumni meet students in Psychology Methodology & Statistics
Alumni event
-
Linguistic atlases, and dialect maps
Workshop Series
-
Dialect Comparison and Historical Reconstruction
Lecture, Workshop Series
- CADS Research Seminars
-
Welcome to Leiden University
Welcome to Leiden University
-
CCLS Seminar
Lecture, Center of Computational Life Sciences
-
AI & Humanities, Help, Hype or Hassle
Conference
-
LUCIR Lecture: Technological Change and Human Rights
Lecture
-
LUCDH Lunchtime Speaker Series: Exploring Web Archives
Lecture
-
The ambiguity of the post-verbal modal morpheme DE in Sichuanese
Lecture
-
Explore the Digital Lab with LUCDH: Open Lab and Demos
Lecture
-
In memoriam professor Harry Wijshoff
On March 28, 2023, our esteemed colleague Prof. Harry Wijshoff passed away. He died after a struggle of several months against a serious illness.
-
Caribbean archaeology in times of corona: ‘Instead of fieldwork, our students worked on an online exhibition’
Recently, in the midst of coronavirus situation, Professor Corinne Hofman and her team became part of the NWO project Island(er)s at the Helm. Both the application process as well as the start of the project were challenged by the limitations set by Covid-19. ‘As a preparation we travelled through the…
-
Foraging skills may have made the essential difference in the evolution of our huge brain
Hunter-gatherers acquire their food through complex gender-specific foraging techniques for a relatively stable and diverse supply of energy. New research indicates that this specialisation by boys and girls starts at a very young age. Most likely, this enabled the human species to evolve much larger…