Open Theses
If you are interested in a thesis topic, you are invited to check with our staff for additional information. If there are currently no announcements, you are still invited to ask our staff for offerings. For this it is advisable to consult an employee from the research area that appeals to you most.
The following descriptions are mostly available in German. If you are, however, interested in writing a thesis in English, you are welcome to contact us.
Automated Planning
We offer various theses in the areas of hybrid planning, hierarchical planning, and partial order causal link (POCL) planning. We focus our research on plan recognition, mixed-initiative planning with the user, plan explanations, heuristic search, modeling support, and complexity analyses.
We are happy to present our current theses topics to you. Please contact Conny Olz in case you are interested.
Semantic Web Technologies and Automated Reasoning
- Validierung und prototypische Implementierung von Technologien im Umfeld von Enterprise Knowledge Graphs mit der Robert Bosch GmbH
- Referring Expressions in Ontological Explanations
- Beschreibung (PDF) - Evaluation of Stream Reasoning Systems
- Description (PDF) - Comparison of OWL Reasoners for SPARQL Queries
- Description (PDF) - Visualization of Description Logic Models
- Description (PDF) - Unit Test Framework for Ontology Development
- Description (PDF) - Classification Procedures for Ontologies
- Description (PDF) - Retrieving Instances of Complex Classes in Ontologies
- Description (PDF) - Whitebox Debugging for Ontologies
- Beschreibung (PDF)
For further topics and translations please contact Birte Glimm.
There is also the opportunity for a joint master's project with the joint master's project with Dr. Thorsten Liebig of derivo GmbH, a spin-off of the institute.
Human-in-the-Loop Reinforcement Learning
Is it possible to train Robots/AI with demonstrations and/or interactive feedback? In our research we want to investigate how methods & concepts from the field of explainable AI (XAI) can be used to enable natural & fast training of robots/agents.
For these reasons we offer several thesis topics in the fields of Human-in-the-Loop Reinforcement Learning (HRL, Imitation Learning), Explainability and Human-Robot-Interaction.
If you are interested, please sent a mail to jakob.karalus(at)uni-ulm.de