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We are advertising a PhD position in the context of a large-scale national project:
HAICu: digital Humanities - Artificial Intelligence - Cultural heritage
This position is embedded in the Cognitive Science and AI department of Tilburg University in close collaboration with Naturalis Biodiversity Center.
The PhD project
Tilburg University and partners are seeking a candidate for a 4-year PhD position to investigate deep learning using sparse labels in cultural heritage data, as part of the national HAICu project. The project will be coordinated by Eric Postma (CSAI, Tilburg University), Anne Schulp (Naturalis/Utrecht University), and Dan Stowell (CSAI, Tilburg University/Naturalis). The project is interdisciplinary at the intersection of Deep Learning for Vision and Paleontology.
The focus of the PhD project will be on developing and evaluating existing and novel computer vision techniques for the automatic visual classification of paleontologic objects, i.e., fossil bones and bone fragments. Based on existing and newly acquired digitized data of bones and bone fragments, the PhD candidate will explore the latest AI algorithms for visual classification to overcome the main challenge: sparse data. For many bone fragments, only a few examples are available. Modern AI techniques can overcome such sparsity by imposing domain-specific constraints or by pretraining on related data. In addition, the candidate will explore generative algorithms to "auto-complete" bone fragments, offering context to the fossil discoveries by the citizen scientist community.
The candidate will be asked to:
Within the dynamic HAICu team, the PhD researcher will participate in Work Package 3 (WP3), entitled “Learning from sparse examples”. In this WP, we collaborate with AI and machine learning experts from University of Groningen, Fontys University of Applied Sciences, and many other partners from the HAICu-wide community.
The HAICu Project
The HAICu project is a large-scale Dutch research project by universities and cultural-heritage institutions into new forms of Artificial Intelligence-based access to multimodal Cultural-Heritage data, both contemporary and historical. Within HAICu, AI researchers, Digital Humanities researchers and a wide range of public and private partners will co-develop scientific solutions to unlock the true societal potential of the current heterogeneous digital heritage collections. It will provide easier, richer and more reliable data access to citizens, journalists, civic organisations, and various other stakeholders.
HAICu is funded by the NWO National Science Agenda (NWA) and has a budget of about EUR 10 million. HAICu started in January 2024 and will last 6 years (until Jan 2030).
For more information about HAICu, please see https://www.haicu.science/
Research and education at the Tilburg School of Humanities and Digital Sciences (TSHD) has a unique focus on humans in the context of the globalizing digital society, on the development of artificial intelligence and interactive technologies, on their impact on communication, culture and society, and on moral and existential challenges that arise. The School of Humanities and Digital Sciences consists of four departments: Communication and Cognition, Cognitive Science and Artificial Intelligence, Culture Studies and Philosophy; several research institutes and a faculty office. Also the University College Tilburg is part of the School. Each year around 275 students commence a Bachelor or (Pre) Master Program. The School has approximately 2000 students and 250 employees.
Tilburg School of Humanities and Digital Sciences
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