Kingston University
Engineering, Computing & the Environment

Jean-Christophe Nebel


Other Research Topics


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News


Game Theoretic Approaches for Smart Communities 2023

Luluwah Al Fagih presented our work to the Canadian inter-university research centre 'GERAD' (Group for Research in Decision Analysis)

Winner of the University 3MT Competition 2019

Mathias Pilz won the Kingston University Three Minute Thesis Competition 2019


Past projects


SwanaSmartStore - Development of Intelligent solar+storage systems which will provide reliable & affordable household energy access and sustainable support for weak and stressed electricity grids in Zimbabwe and Botswana.
Game-Theoretic Approaches applied to i) Energy and ii) Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) Management
PAVR: Platform for Animation and Virtual Reality - Cooperation in a distributed virtual environment
Keyframe Animation of Articulated Figures - Collision Avoidance
Facial surgery planning - CLAPA (Cleft Lip and Palate) and orthognathic surgery planning
Virtual surgery - Techniques to generate, model and deform 3D data
Parallel raytracing - Parallel architectures with distributed memories and CPU power

Past researchers


Masoud Salehi Borujeni, Researcher, 2020-21
SwanaSmartStore - Development of Intelligent solar+storage systems which will provide reliable & affordable household energy access and sustainable support for weak and stressed electricity grids in Zimbabwe and Botswana.

Supervision Team: Dr Eng Ofetotse and Prof. Jean-Christophe Nebel


Completed research students


Matthias Pilz, PhD (2020)
Game–Theoretic Approaches for Smart Prosumer Communities

Supervision Team: Prof. Jean-Christophe Nebel, Dr Luluwah Al-Fagih (DoS), Prof. Gavin Gillmore, Prof. Souheil Khaddaj


Media


We created the first AI-powered solar electricity backup system for houses in sub-Saharan Africa, by Masoud Salehi Borujeni, Eng Ofetotse & Jean-Christophe Nebel
The Conversation UK, January 25, 2022 1.45pm GMT (over 11,000 readers)

"Sub-Saharan Africa is one of the world’s most sunlit regions. A prototype generator uses that sunlight in place of diesel to support unreliable electricity grids". Our research is featured in this article.

Publications


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j.nebel@kingston.ac.uk