New VILNIUS TECH eBook

Library February 3, 2026
New VILNIUS TECH eBook
Darius Bazaras, Aldona Jarašūnienė
Logistikos ir transporto vadybos baigiamųjų darbų techninio parengimo reikalavimai
(Technical Requirements for the Preparation of Final Theses in Logistics and Transport Management)
The book is written in Lithuanian.

These methodological guidelines outline the essential knowledge and competencies required of students when preparing a final thesis. A final thesis constitutes a comprehensive and substantial academic document; therefore, its technical preparation and formatting must be carried out with particular care. Special emphasis is placed on the correct structuring of the table of contents, as well as on the automated generation of lists of figures and tables. The use of a consistent and standardized format for the list of references significantly facilitates the writing and editing process. These methodological guidelines are intended for students enrolled in Logistics and Transport Management study programmes.

The eBook >>>

* VILNIUS TECH extends complimentary access to its entire library of e-books to members within the university community. Institutional users are granted cost-free access to the e-books by logging onto the University's computer network, whether on-site or remotely through a Virtual Private Network (VPN). To facilitate offline reading without an internet connection, it is requisite to install the IPC Reader offline application. Users can subsequently download the desired e-books while connected to the institutional network and read them offline at their convenience. For additional details concerning e-books, please refer to the provided link >>>

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New doctoral dissertation
New doctoral dissertation
VILNIUS TECH Library invites you to follow the published new dissertations. The dissertation „Control of Robot Path Using an Artificial Intelligence System by Fusing Sensor Signal“ („Roboto trajektorijos valdymas dirbtinio intelekto sistema suliejant jutiklių signalus“) prepared at VILNIUS TECH by Vygantas Ušinskis. The dissertation was prepared in 2021–2026. Scientific consultant – Prof. Dr  Vytautas Bučinskas. The dissertation was defended at the public meeting of the Dissertation Defence Council of the Scientific Field of Mechanical Engineering in the Aula Doctoralis Meeting Hall of Vilnius Gediminas Technical University at 10 a.m. on 30 April 2026. The dissertation examines the problem of local robot navigation, where sensor data must be processed in real time to assess the environment and generate an adaptive motion trajectory. The research object is a local navigation system with sensor fusion for mobile robots operating in tunnels and confined channels. Navigation is divided into four parts: environment assessment, localisation, path planning, and motion execution. The analysis of localisation technologies enables the selection of an effective sensor set for obstacle detection. Heuristic and artificial intelligence methods allow generating an optimal trajectory that avoids collisions and maintains the goal. The work addresses navigation and obstacle detection in human-inaccessible environments using a cost-efficient combination of active and passive sensors, with experimental validation of the system’s performance. The dissertation consists of an introduction, three main chapters, conclusions, references, and a list of the author’s scientific publications on the topic of the dissertation. The introduction presents the problem, relevance, research objective and tasks, methodology, scientific novelty, practical significance, and defended statements, as well as the author’s publications and the structure of the dissertation. The First Chapter presents a literature review, including an overview and comparison of global and local path-planning methods, localisation technologies and their combinations, and sensor-fusion approaches used in mobile robots. Key factors affecting reliable navigation are identified, forming the basis for the dissertation tasks. The Second Chapter describes the developed research methodology for autonomous tunnel navigation: the operating principles of the red, green and blue (RGB) channel-camera- and laser-based optical obstacle detection system, sensor-fusion techniques, and the application of modified Vector Field Histogram (VFH) and machine-learning-based path-planning methods. The Third Chapter presents the research results: optical system experiments, path-planning simulations, a comparison between machine-learning and modified VFH methods, and the testing of the constructed robot prototype in a laboratory environment. Five research papers have been published on the topic of the dissertation: three in journals indexed in the Web of Science database, and two in conference proceedings. Additionally, five conference presentations related to the dissertation topic have been delivered in Lithuania and abroad. Doctoral dissertation readers can search via VILNIUS TECH Virtual Library.  
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