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Seminars/Colloquia/Invited Talks

    Seminars

    Pedro Felzenszwalb

    Representation and Detection of Shapes in Images

    PLACE: Clark 314
    EVENT: CIS Seminar Series
    DATE:October 11, 2005
    TIME: 1:00 - 2:00

    Abstract

    The study of shape is a recurring theme in computer vision. For example, shape is one of the main sources of information that can be used for object recognition. In this talk I will present techniques for characterizing two-dimensional shapes using a particular representation of objects in terms of triangulated polygons. This representation has important properties both from a perceptual and a computational point of view.

    It is common to look for non-rigid objects in images by considering each object as a deformed version of an ideal template. I will describe an efficient algorithm to solve this problem in a wide range of situations, and show examples on both medical images and images of natural scenes. I will also consider the problem of learning a deformable shape model for a particular class of objects. Finally I will describe a stochastic grammar that can generate arbitrary triangulated polygons while capturing Gestalt principles of shape regularity. Intuitively the grammar tends to generate shapes that have smooth boundaries and a nice decomposition into almost symmetric parts. I will illustrate how this grammar can be used as a generic model for detecting objects in images.

    Brief biography

    Pedro F. Felzenszwalb received the BS degree in Computer Science from Cornell University in 1999. He received a PhD in Computer Science from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 2003. After leaving MIT he spent one year as a postdoctoral fellow at Cornell Univerisity. Currently he is an assistant professor in the Department of Computer Science at the Univerisity of Chicago.



 
 




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CIS (cis@cis.jhu.edu); Tuesday, 20-Sep-2005 09:33:27 EDT