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Processing and Visualizing Sparsely Scanned Outdoor Scenes
Speaker: Dr. Baoquan Chen Computer Science and Engineering Department University of Minnesota Title: "Processing and Visualizing Sparsely Scanned Outdoor Scenes" Date: Thursday, 9 November 2006 Time: 4:00pm - 5:00pm Venue: Room 4480 (via lift nos. 25/26) HKUST Abstract: Capturing real-world scenes is both an interesting and a challenging task in computer graphics. To offer unconstrained navigation of the scenes, 3D representations are first needed. Advancement in laser scanning technology is making 3D acquisition feasible for large outdoor objects. However, thus scanned data demonstrate several challenging properties such as incompleteness (missing geometry), complexity (e.g., geometry of plants), inaccuracy (moving objects), and large data size. These properties raise unprecedented challenges for existing methods that deal with small to medium range scans all the way from scan registration to geometry representation and rendering. In this talk, I will describe solutions to handling long range outdoor scans. The underlying approaches fall into two directions: the first one is artistic abstraction and depiction directly from point-based representation; and the second one is knowledge-based full geometry construction from sparse scans. *********************** Biography: Baoquan Chen is an assistant professor of Computer Science and Engineering at the University of Minnesota at Twin Cities. His research interests generally lie in computer graphics and visualization, focusing specifically on outdoor scene acquisition, illustrative rendering and visualization and interactive techniques. Chen received an MS in Electronic Engineering from Tsinghua University, Beijing (1994), and a second MS (1997) and then PhD (1999) in Computer Science from the State University of New York at Stony Brook. Chen is the recipient of the Microsoft Innovation Excellence Program 2002, the NSF CAREER award 2003, McKnight Land-Grant Professorship at the University of Minnesota 2004-2006, the Best Paper award in IEEE Visualization 2005, and the IEEE Outstanding Service Award 2006. He is an invited keynote speaker at the Second International Symposium on Plant Growth Modeling, Simulation, Visualization and Applications 2006. He is the program co-chair of IEEE Visualization 2004, general co-chair of IEEE Visualization 2005 and 2006 and papers co-chair of Symposium on Point-based Graphics 2006 and 2007. He is a senior member of IEEE.