Previous events - Page 16
Here, we will walk you through the basic principles of data anonymization and share strategies for both pseudonymisation and anonymisation of personal data.
Elevate your academic writing with storytelling and writing principles! Join this workshop to learn how to make your research papers clear, engaging, and readable by incorporating storytelling techniques and effective writing principles.
Doctoral candidate Karianne Ødemark at the Department of Geosciences, Faculty of Mathematics and Natural Sciences, is defending the thesis Extreme precipitation and physical model-based estimates for return values and PMP in Norway for the degree of Philosophiae Doctor.
Doctoral candidate Ben Tore Henriksen at the Department of Pharmacy, Faculty of Mathematics and Natural Sciences, is defending the thesis "Towards optimised medication management and pharmacotherapy for hip fracture patients in primary and secondary healthcare settings; current perspectives and an intervention for patient safety" for the degree of Philosophiae Doctor.
The Deep learning seminar will be held on Thursdays at 10:15–12:00. Please register to this mailing list if you would like updates.
In this talk, Tobias Bach, Professor of Political Science, shares his insights from many years of writing and evaluating research proposals – both successful and unsuccessful ones.
This course will give you an introduction to data classification and storage, data privacy and research ethics – essential for the whole project life cycle – from collecting data to sharing of your results.
A well-executed literature search forms the foundation of knowledge on specific topics, prevents redundant research, helps identify research gaps, and provides an opportunity to position your own research.
In this talk, Glen Peters, Norway’s most salient academic on X (former Twitter) and a global carbon cycle scientist, will give you the recipe on how to make this, or other SoMe-channels, boost your research, thinking, writing, and academic network.
In this talk, two professors who publish a lot and review and edit even more, Øistein Anmarkrud and Marte Blikstad-Balas, will share their best advice on what to do to get your academic work published.
Title: Climate monitoring activities and forecast diagnostics at ECMWF
Speaker: David Lavers, ECMWF
The EMERALD Open Science Day is the closing meeting of the project with the aim to share the experience and knowledge gained throughout the project period between 2019 and 2023.
This course will provide you with tools and inspiration to get you started on using ethnographic fiction to communicate your research.
Learn about different tools, platforms, and services to share your research and be more visible. In this workshop you will get an introduction to research visibility from library experts and hands-on help from the communication team at the faculty on how to build your online profile!
How can peer-group mentoring be used as a tool for discussion and development of teaching? Get inspired and discuss, as we share our experiences from IPED.
Improve your presentation skills by making more impactful, memorable, and professional PowerPoint presentations. This workshop is designed to develop your skills to design visually impactful presentations and elevate your public speaking and communication skills.
This course will give you answers to the most frequently asked questions about open access publishing and give you hand-on tips on how to navigate publishing agreements, licenses, and UiO’s Rights Retention Policy
In this talk, director of RITMO and an open research advocate, Alexander Refsum Jensenius will discuss the evolving landscape of research assessment and what it means for the future of your career.
The conference is an occasion to bring together researchers in the beautiful Hammamet to discuss on the recent developments in stochastics with applications to mathematical physics and finance.
An event dedicated to the memory of Habib Ouerdiane.
Welcome to the GEOHYD Lunch Seminar Friday 13th of October @ 12:15 in Aud. 1, Geology building, or via video link using Zoom. The seminar is held by Kristoffer Aalstad, Dept of Geosciences, UiO.
Fluid efflux from the brain plays an important role in solute waste clearance. Current experimental approaches provide little spatial information or data collection is limited due to short duration or low frequency of sampling. One approach shows tracer efflux to be independent of molecular size, indicating bulk flow, yet also decelerating like simple membrane diffusion. In an apparent contradiction to this report, other studies point to tracer efflux acceleration following infusions. In this talk, I will share a stylized advection-diffusion model for clearance of waste, which reconciles the apparent contradiction, and discuss methods to validate it with novel MRI data. Being stylized, it is also simple enough to permit a dimensional analysis which indicates that clearance of waste from the brain is governed by three dimensionless quantities including a potential bottle-neck for clearance due to transport across the surface membranes.
Øystein Elgarøy, Professor at Institute of Theoretical Astrophysics, University of Oslo.
Is it difficult to set aside time to write? The Academic Writing Centre organsises structured writing sessions for PhDs and Postdocs.
Title: Are Northern Hemisphere boreal forest fires more sensitive to future aerosol mitigation than to greenhouse gas driven warming?
Speaker: Robert J. Allen, University of California, Riverside
A two-day seminar for all PhD candidates who started their PhD at the MN faculty in autumn 2022 and 2023.