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Master Theses

General Information

The Department of Information Systems for Sustainable Society offers bachelor and master theses. However, the following information is exclusively applicable to master theses.

The following examiners are available:

The individual theses are supervised by one or two researchers affiliated to the department. Please hand in your application in due time. After having agreed upon the topic of the thesis, a prompt registration at the examination office of the University of Cologne is possible.

For optimum preparation, we recommend you to participate in the courses offered by our department. These comprise detailed insights into relevant research topics in the context of energy systems. Furthermore, we aim at conveying fundamentals regarding data analytics and machine learning. Within additional seminars, you are granted the option to gain experience with respect to scientific work and writing. The individual feedback may act as a crucial cornerstone to assess your performance level, main interests, and requirements to successfully realize a thesis.

We strictly advise students to writer their theses using Latex. This enables a quick adaption of the written thesis, e.g. to submit it to a journal. To facilitate the writing process, we provide a Latex template on Overleaf. Using Overleaf's documentation, students can easily learn how to use Latex for scientific projects.

Topics

Please find below a list of all theses which are currently to be assigned. If no topic finds your interest, you might want to have a look at the research domains below and contact a potential supervisor directly. We can then try to find a suitable topic for you. For further inspiration you can also have a look at past thesis topics at our chair.

Name Co-Supervisor
Power TAC: Interpret the Broker's decisions using an XAI method Saber Talari
Communication among autonomous agents in a competitive environment Saber Talari
Instruments for Sustainable Travel Behavior Influence Janik Muires
Impacts of Public Transport Disruptions of Micro Mobility Usage Patterns: An Empirical Analysis using Realtime Data Janik Muires
Evaluation of Multimodal Routing on Real World Data Philipp Peter

 

Topic Domains