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Non-rigid structure from locally-rigid motion
-------------------------------------------------------------------- ***Joint Seminar*** -------------------------------------------------------------------- The Hong Kong University of Science & Technology Department of Computer Science and Engineering Center of Image, Vision and Graphics -------------------------------------------------------------------- Speaker: Prof. Kyros KUTULAKOS Computer Science, University of Toronto Title: "Non-rigid structure from locally-rigid motion" Date: Monday, 12 April 2010 Time: 2:00pm - 3:00pm Venue: Room 3402 (via lifts 17/18) The Hong Kong University of Science & Technology Abstract: Non-rigidity is pervasive in the world around us: a person's body movements and facial expressions, the deformations of cloth, and the collective motion of a group (e.g., people, cars, plants, etc) can all be described as non-rigid motions in 3D. Unfortunately, building non-rigid 3D models from a video sequence has proved very hard, and still remains one of the few open problems in visual reconstruction. In this talk, I will present a new approach to the "non-rigid structure from motion" problem that promises to significantly expand the non-rigid scenes reconstructible from video in 3D. The idea is to first solve many local 3-point, N-view *rigid* reconstruction problems independently, providing a "soup" of independently-moving and nearly-rigid 3D triangles. Triangles in this soup are then combined into deforming bodies in a bottom-up fashion. I will show results on a variety of challenging scenes, including deforming cloth, tearing paper, faces, and multiple independently-deforming surfaces. This is joint work with Jonathan Taylor and Allan Jepson at the University of Toronto. ****************** Biography: Kyros Kutulakos is a Professor of Computer Science at the University of Toronto. He received a BA degree from the University of Crete and a PhD from the University of Wisconsin, Madison, both in Computer Science. Following his dissertation work, he held faculty appointments at the University of Rochester and the University of Toronto, and a visiting scholar appointment at Microsoft Research Asia. Prof. Kutulakos is a recipient of an Alfred P. Sloan Research Fellowship, an Ontario Premier's Research Excellence Award, and four best paper prizes (a Best Paper Honorable Mention at the 2006 European Conference on Computer Vision; a David Marr Prize Honorable Mention in 2005; a David Marr Prize in 1999; and an Outstanding Paper Award at the Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition Conference in 1994). He was Program co-Chair of the International Conference on Computational Photography in 2010 and of the Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition Conference in 2003, and will be Program co-Chair of the International Conference on Computer Vision in 2013.