|
|
|
Fall 2001 Colloquium Series
Dr.
Takeo Kanade
Computer Vision, Visual and Multimedia Technology, and Robotics
Wednesday, December 12, 2001
Building 8 Auditorium - 3:30 PM
(Refreshments at 3:00 PM)
Goddard's Office of the Assistant Director for Information Sciences
and Chief Information Officer announces the next GSFC Information Sciences
and Technology (IS&T) Colloquium presentation of the Fall 2001 Series.
Dr. Takeo Kanade, will talk about Computer Vision, Visual and Multimedia
Technology, and Robotics. Is it possible to digitize a three-dimensional,
time-varying scene from the world into a computer as a 3D event, just
like real-time CT can digitize body volume? Then, not only could we
render images from any viewpoint or angle - even those at which there
were no cameras (the concept of "Let's watch the NBA on the court")
but we could also conceive of a whole new notion of "event archiving
and manipulation."
Since 1994, the Carnegie Mellon University's Virtualized
Reality project has been developing computer vision technologies
for this purpose with the 3D Room - a fully digital room that can capture
events occurring in it by many (at this moment 50) surrounding video
cameras, including pan/tilt heads. Dr. Kanade will discuss this theory,
project facility, computation, and results. This project team recently
worked for CBS Sports to develop a multi-robot camera system that was
used to broadcast the Super
Bowl XXXV on January 28, 2001. The system, which CBS calls "EyeVision",
produces a surrounding view of various interesting and controversial
plays. Dr. Kanade will present the contribution to that real-time system
and experience with it. If time allows, he will also cover briefly a
few more topics, including face image analysis and vision-based autonomous
helicopter flight.
Takeo Kanade received his Ph.D. in Electrical Engineering from Kyoto
University, Japan, in 1974. After holding a faculty position at Kyoto
University, he joined Carnegie Mellon University in 1980, where he is
currently the U. A. Helen Whitaker University Professor of Computer
Science and Robotics.
Dr. Kanade has worked in multiple areas of robotics: computer vision,
manipulators, autonomous mobile robots, and sensors. He has written
more than 200 technical papers and reports in these areas, as well as
more than ten patents. He has been the principal investigator of a dozen
major vision and robotics projects at Carnegie Mellon.
Dr. Kanade has been elected to the National Academy of Engineering.
He is a Fellow of the IEEE, a Fellow of ACM, and a Founding Fellow of
American Association for Artificial Intelligence. He received many awards,
including C & C Award, Joseph Engelburger Award, and JARA Award.
IS&T Colloquium Committee Host: Ben Kobler
kobler@rattler.gsfc.nasa.gov
|