On November 11–12, 2025, the XXIV International Scientific and Practical Conference “Information and Communication Technologies for Victory and Recovery” was held at the Institute of Telecommunications.

Conference focus areas:

  • Telecommunication systems
  • Intelligent technologies and sustainable development
  • Information technologies and mathematical modelling
  • Geoinformation systems and remote sensing of the Earth

The conference was organized by:

  • Institute of Telecommunications and the Global Information Space (Ukraine, Kyiv);
  • Scientific Centre for Aerospace Research of the Earth, Institute of Geological Sciences (Ukraine, Kyiv);
  • Taras Shevchenko National University of Kyiv (Ukraine, Kyiv);
  • National Aerospace University “KhAI” (Ukraine, Kharkiv);
  • Kyiv National University of Construction and Architecture (Ukraine, Kyiv);
  • National University of Kyiv-Mohyla Academy (Ukraine, Kyiv);
  • Vinnytsia National Technical University (Ukraine, Vinnytsia);
  • National Space Agency of Ukraine (Ukraine, Kyiv);
  • National Centre “Junior Academy of Sciences of Ukraine” (Ukraine, Kyiv);
  • University of London (Royal Holloway), England (London, UK);
  • Kielce University of Technology (Politechnika Świętokrzyska), Poland (Kielce, Poland);
  • Opole University of Technology, Opole, Poland;
  • Università di Roma-2 “Tor Vergata”, Italy (Rome, Italy).

Based on the conference materials, a collective monograph “Mathematical Modelling and Information and Communication Technologies for Strengthening and Recovery” was published, containing 74 abstracts.

Scientists from Ukraine, the United Kingdom, Italy, and Poland took part in the conference. The number of participants was 82. A total of 44 reports were presented and discussed.

The reports showcased new approaches to data collection, analysis, and integration in national security systems, telemedicine, enterprise management, and military scenarios. Significant attention was given to online analytics, SCADA systems, digital twins, and process modelling. Presentations included the use of large language models in chatbots, management interfaces, metadata systems, and GIS. Issues of AI recommendation reliability and human–machine interaction were also considered. The program covered topics of wireless network performance and stability, adaptive data transmission methods, radio coverage modelling, IoT technologies, and GPU computing for complex physical problems.

The largest thematic block focused on environmental monitoring, damage assessment, geological process modelling, water and forest system monitoring, the impact of war on natural areas, and the use of satellite data for risk assessment and security planning.

Issues of sustainable development, crypto-economics, environmental security, the impact of military actions on infrastructure, and agroecosystem condition assessment were also discussed.

The conference demonstrated that modern technologies — from AI and cryptography to GIS and satellite analytics — play a key role in addressing complex challenges in security, ecology, management, and modelling. The dominant trend is the integration of data, intelligent algorithms, and spatial technologies to create resilient, adaptive, and scientifically grounded solutions.

Many postgraduate students from our Institute, Vinnytsia Polytechnic Institute, and Kharkiv Aviation University participated in the event. Strong presentations were delivered by the following postgraduate students:

Volodymyr Duda, Ivan Ivanov, Serhii Pidsadnyi, Yevhen Oshkodyorov, and Andrii Pazynin — PhD students of the Institute of Telecommunications and the Global Information Space of the National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine.

From Vinnytsia National Technical University: Borys Varer, Serhii Levytskyi, Oleksii Bondarchuk.

From Kharkiv Aviation University: Nataliia Slomchynska.

According to the results of the conference, the organizing committee selected 10 works:

  1. Information technology for data collection and processing for use in a decision support system in the field of national security

    O. M. Trofymchuk, P. I. Bidyuk, T. I. Prosiankina-Zharova, O. M. Terentyev

  2. ECG as a cybersecurity factor: rhythm-adaptive user authentication

    R. Butsii, S. Lupenko

  3. On walks in infinite forest and algorithms of key establishment and encryption

    V. Ustimenko, T. Chojecki

  4. A method of processing two-dimensional images based on vector nonlinear filtering

    N. Tuliakova, O. Trofymchuk

  5. Information technology to improve the accuracy of measuring parameters of fast-changing processes

    O. Voitsekhovska, B. Mokin, O. Mokin

  6. Remote methods for assessing the impact of Russia’s armed aggression on the environmental security of protected areas

    T. Trysniuk, V. Vasylenko

  7. Key ecological and geological factors of the impact of massive artillery shelling on regions of Ukraine

    Ye. Yakovlev

  8. Possible approaches to ecological and economic assessment of the impact of engineering–geological hazards on damage (destruction) of buildings and structures

    O. Rohozhyn, V. Trofymchuk, Ye. Yakovlev

  9. Using a user’s active context in an enterprise management system to improve the performance of a universal interface based on generative AI

    I. Ivanov

  10. Acceleration of computational algorithms for Bayesian network topology construction using the additivity property of minimum description length functions

    V. Duda, O. Terentyev