Kyberszittya Research and Robotics
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TDK and student research

A dedicated page for Scientific Students’ Associations work, student research directions, and preparation for TDK submissions.

What belongs here

  • Student research ideas that go beyond standard course assignments.
  • Topics with experimental, analytical, or prototype-oriented outcomes.
  • Work that can grow into a TDK submission, thesis topic, publication, or demonstrator.

Good TDK directions

  • Artificial intelligence and robotics applications with measurable evaluation.
  • Hypergraph-based modeling, structured knowledge, and semantic representations.
  • Industrial and cyber-physical systems with interpretable data-driven methods.

Recent TDK-related students

Czetin Márk

MSc-level student research connected to current TDK and thesis-oriented development work.

TDK placement: 1st place Year: 2026 A dedicated 2023 TDK collaboration folder was found in the archive, but the exact submission title still needs refinement from the source materials.
Czetin Márk

MSc-level student research connected to current TDK and thesis-oriented development work.

TDK placement: TBD Year: 2026 A dedicated 2023 TDK collaboration folder was found in the archive, but the exact submission title still needs refinement from the source materials.
Horváth Kata

Work: Nagy nyelvi modellekre épülő, lokálisan futtatható tanulást segítő chatbot fejlesztése.

TDK-related student work linked to an AI-supported modern secondary-school website development project.

TDK placement: 1st place Year: 2025 Verified from the dedicated TDK abstract and manuscript files in the student archive. Graduated
Szakál Gyula Richárd

Work: Gépi látás alapú gesztusvezérlés ember-gép interakciókhoz.

Computer-vision-oriented student work and interactive human-machine control directions.

TDK placement: 2nd place Year: 2025 TDK participation is documented in the consultation archive; a separate TDK manuscript title was not found, so this currently follows the thesis title. Graduated

How we can work on it

  • Start from a focused research question instead of a broad software project alone.
  • Keep notes, references, experiment logs, and intermediate results from the beginning.
  • Build toward a clear outcome: report, presentation, prototype, experiment, or competition submission.

Expected outcomes

  • A well-scoped written summary with related work and evaluation.
  • A reproducible artifact such as code, dataset, experiment setup, or demo.
  • A presentation-ready storyline for internal review, TDK, or later thesis continuation.