VASC Seminar

TBA: Yin Li

Newell Simon Hall 1507

VASC Seminar
Dinesh Jayaraman
PhD Candidate
University of Texas at Austin

Embodied learning for visual recognition

Event Location: Gates 7101Bio: Dinesh Jayaraman is a PhD candidate in Kristen Grauman's group at UT Austin. His research interests are broadly in visual recognition and machine learning. In the last few years, Dinesh has worked on visual learning and active recognition in embodied agents, unsupervised representation learning from unlabeled video, visual attribute prediction, and [...]

VASC Seminar
Prof. Roberto Manduchi manduchi@soe.ucsc.edu
Professor of Computer Engineering
University of California, Santa Cruz

Assistive technology for wayfinding, information access, and public transit

Event Location: Newell Simon Hall 1507Bio: Roberto Manduchi is a Professor of Computer Engineering at the University of California, Santa Cruz, where he conducts research in the areas of computer vision and sensor processing with applications to assistive technology. Prior to joining UCSC in 2001, he worked at the NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory and at [...]

VASC Seminar
Pulkit Agrawal
PhD Student 
University of California Berkeley

Intuitive Physics & Intuitive Behavior 

Event Location: Newell Simon Hall 1507Bio: Pulkit is a PhD Student in the department of Computer Science at UC Berkeley. His research focuses on computer vision, robotics and computational neuroscience. He is advised by Dr. Jitendra Malik. Pulkit completed his bachelors in Electrical Engineering from IIT Kanpur and was awarded the Director’s Gold Medal. He is a recipient of Fulbright Science [...]

VASC Seminar
Dima Damen
Assistant Professor
University of Bristol, United Kingdom

The lifetime of an object – an object’s perspective onto interactions

Event Location: Newell Simon Hall 1507Bio: Lecturer (Assistant Professor) in Computer Vision at the University of Bristol. Received her PhD from the University of Leeds (2009). Dima's research interests are in the automatic understanding of object interactions, actions and activities using static and wearable visual (and depth) sensors. Dima co-chaired BMVC 2013, is area chair [...]

VASC Seminar

The lifetime of an object – an object’s perspective onto interactions

Newell Simon Hall 1507

Dima Damen Assistant Professor, University of Bristol, United Kingdom April 10, 2017, 3:00-4:00 p.m., Newell Simon Hall 1507 Abstract As opposed to the traditional notion of actions and activities in computer vision, where the motion (e.g. jumping) or the goal (e.g. cooking) is the focus, I will argue for an object-centred perspective onto actions and [...]

VASC Seminar

Computer Vision @ Scale

Gates 6115

Manohar Paluri Research Lead, Facebook Abstract Over the past 5 years the community has made significant strides in the field of Computer Vision. Thanks to large scale datasets, specialized computing in form of GPUs and many breakthroughs in modeling better convnet architectures Computer Vision systems in the wild at scale are becoming a reality. At [...]

VASC Seminar

Towards scaling video understanding

Newell Simon Hall 1507

Serena Yeung Ph.D. Student, Stanford University Abstract The quantity of video data is vast, yet our capabilities for visual recognition and understanding in videos lags significantly behind that for images. In this talk, I will discuss the challenges of scale in labeling, modeling, and inference behind this gap. I will then present three works addressing [...]

VASC Seminar
Haroon Idrees haroon@cs.ucf.edu
Post Doc Associate
Center for Research in Computer Vision, University of Central Florida (UCF)

Visual Analysis of Dense Crowds

Event Location: Newell Simon Hall 1507Bio: Haroon Idrees is a postdoctoral researcher in the Center for Research in Computer Vision (CRCV) at the University of Central Florida (UCF). He is interested in machine vision and learning, with focus on crowd analysis, action recognition, multi-camera and airborne surveillance, as well as deep learning and multimedia content [...]

VASC Seminar

Haroon Idrees: Visual Analysis of Dense Crowds

Newell Simon Hall 1507

Haroon Idrees Post Doc Associate, Center for Research in Computer Vision, University of Central Florida (UCF) Abstract Automated analysis of dense crowds is a challenging problem with far-reaching applications in crowd safety and management, as well as gauging political significance of protests and demonstrations. In this talk, I will first describe a counting approach which [...]