Working on a project of the Financial Times, students of the Open Source Global Justice Investigation lab used open-source techniques, including geolocation, weapons identification, and social media analysis, to contribute to an investigation on Haiti’s gang crisis. In this podcast, they explain what methods they used, what challenges they faces, and how they worked together during their research. (Note: this podcast was recorded before the project was finalized)
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Working on a project of the Financial Times, students of the Open Source Global Justice Investigation lab used open-source techniques, including geolocation, weapons identification, and social media analysis, to contribute to an investigation on Haiti’s gang crisis. In this podcast, they explain what methods they used, what challenges they faces, and how they worked together during their research. (Note: this podcast was recorded before the project was finalized)
In de aflevering van vandaag praat ik met Dana van taalwetenschap over haar studiekeuze. We bespreken het moment waarop ze wist dat Taalwetenschap in Utrecht de studie voor haar was. Ook komen de mogelijkheden tot specialisatie in latere jaren aan bod, zoals het nieuwe verdiepingspakket over computerlinguïstiek en AI. Verder hebben we het over het gegeven dat er in de taalwetenschap geen absolute feiten zijn, maar vooral theorieën, en dat je dus tegen vaagheid moet kunnen.
Heb je nog vragen voor Dana, of andere vragen over het maken van je studiekeuze? Mail ons op: voorlichtingen.gw@uu.nl
Voor meer details over de studie Taalwetenschap kun je terecht op de website van de Universiteit Utrecht: https://www.uu.nl/bachelors/taalwetenschap
Utrecht University
Working on a project of the Financial Times, students of the Open Source Global Justice Investigation lab used open-source techniques, including geolocation, weapons identification, and social media analysis, to contribute to an investigation on Haiti’s gang crisis. In this podcast, they explain what methods they used, what challenges they faces, and how they worked together during their research. (Note: this podcast was recorded before the project was finalized)