Dissertations within AI and Digitalization
Reliable robots, brain-computer interfaces, and computing for AI are some of the topics covered in doctoral theses within AI and Digitalization during the fall 2025.
– Publicerad den 7 January 2026

Faseeh Ahmad: Towards Self-Reliant Robots: Skill Learning, Failure Recovery, and Real-Time Adaptation. Integrating Behavior Trees, Reinforcement Learning, and Vision-Language Models for Robust Robotic Autonomy
Summary of Faseeh Ahmad’s thesis
Pex Tufvesson: Real-Time Brain-Computer Interfaces
Pex Tufvesson's thesis addresses some of challenges in brain-computer interfacing, particularly in the context of reducing cognitive load, addressing latency uncertainties and developing a modular brain-computer interface research framework. The work presents new insights and pathways toward functional systems.
Link to Pex Tufvesson's thesis
Arturo Prieto: 3D Integration Technology and Near-Memory Computing for Edge AI
In Arturo Prieto's thesis, solutions for improving edge AI implementations are evaluated considering two approaches: technology integration, and hardware architecture design.