Breuel
Kolloquium am 22.01.2003
Computational Vision -- Algorithms, Learning, and
Applications
Prof. Dr. Thomas Breuel
(PARC, Palo Alto, USA)
Visual object recognition is a highly complex
information processing task that humans seem to perform
effortlessly. Understanding visual object recognition is an
important scientific problem, and visual object recognition by
computer has many applications in areas such as robotics,
navigation, human-computer interaction, handwriting recognition,
and document analysis. Particularly remarkable about humans is
their ability to learn and adapt to visual input, often from
unlabeled data.
In my work, I investigate visual object
recognition by building computational and statistical models and
testing them on real data. In the first part of my talk, I will
describe a set of computational tools and algorithms based on
branch-and-bound methods that allow geometric matching and
optimization problems occurring in visual object recognition to
be solved efficiently and robustly. In the second part, I will
describe statistical models of the variability of object
appearance, as well as methods for learning such models from
labeled and unlabeled data. I will provide illustrations of the
technique with applications to trainable 3D object recognition,
handwriting recognition and OCR, and document image analysis.
| Termin : |
Mittwoch, 22.01.2003, 17.00 Uhr |
| Raum : |
Gebäude 36, Raum
226 |
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