“Percutaneous Endoscopic and Radiologic Gastrostomy – Complications and outcomes for various indications and applications”

PhD Conferral Mrs. Charlotte Keijser, MSc.
- PhD Defence
“Firm Participation, Learning and Innovation in Heterogenous Value Chains of IT-enabled Services: The case of South Africa”

Workshop on Citizen Science and Crowdsourcing
- seminar
- lecture
Crowdsourcing, a term coined by Jeff Howe, is when you take a large task, break it down into smaller - micro - pieces and send it out to a large group of people to perform each microtask in parallel for a monetary reward. Microtask crowdsourcing traditionally covers a different set of scenarios. Tasks primarily rely on basic human abilities, including visual and audio cognition, as well as natural language understanding and communication (sometimes in different languages) and less on acquired skills (such as subject-matter knowledge).

Valedictory lecture Ernst Homburg on 26 April
- inaugural lectures & valedictory lectures
Prior to the lecture a symposium takes place at the Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences.

DKE - Student for a Day - 8 April 2019
- study information
Are you curious to know what a normal day for a student at Data Science and Knowledge Engineering looks like? Join our students and see for yourself if the programme fits you.

DKE - Student for a Day - 9 April 2019
- study information
Are you curious to know what a normal day for a student at Data Science and Knowledge Engineering looks like? Join our students and see for yourself if the programme fits you.

DKE - Student for a Day - 15 April 2019
- study information
Are you curious to know what a normal day for a student at Data Science and Knowledge Engineering looks like? Join our students and see for yourself if the programme fits you.

DKE - Student for a Day - 16 April 2019
- study information
Are you curious to know what a normal day for a student at Data Science and Knowledge Engineering looks like? Join our students and see for yourself if the programme fits you.

WBM Lecture: From fixing what is wrong, to building what is strong
Healthcare professionals used to focus on how mental disorders would limit someone in life, and try to fix that. Instead of fixating on the problem, a better solution could be to endeavor on what a patient still can do. There have been three major shifts in healthcare: from disease to a health/coping model, from expert based to experience based, and from focusing on medication to focusing on (social) stress and how to resolve this. This shift could lead to increased mental wellbeing, but what does that mean? Mental wellbeing does not mean being sick or cured, but a balance that needs to be searched for constantly and most important, it is most likely not just ‘being happy’.
Curious? Join us during this lecture of Manuela Heins

More than just a game
- workshop
A workshop organised by Queen Mary University of London and Maastricht University
