BCVI 2012 - Workshop on Biological and Computer Vision Interfaces
Topics/Call fo Papers
Welcome to the Workshop on Biological and Computer Vision Interfaces in Firenze October 12, 2012. This workshop is held in conjunction with ECCV 2012
From the simplest vision architectures in insects to the extremely complex cortical hierarchy in primates, it is fascinating to observe how biology found efficient solutions to solve vision problems. Pioneers in computer vision had this dream to build machines that could match and perhaps outperform human vision. This goal has not been reached, at least not on the scale that was originally planned, but the field of computer vision has met many other challenges from an unexpected variety of applications and fostered entirely new scientific and technological areas such as computer graphics and medical image analysis. However, modeling and emulating with computers biological vision largely remains an open challenge while there are still many outstanding issues in computer vision.
The aim of this workshop is to bring together researchers from the fields of biological and computer vision, computational neuroscience, and psychophysics, have them present their latest results and discuss how an interdisciplinary approach could foster new advances in science and technology at the interface between neuroscience and computer science. This will provide a cross-fertilization ground that will hopefully stimulate the emergence of new ideas and collaborations among scientists coming from different horizons.
This workshop will be a one-day event with prestigious invited speakers discussing several aspects of biological and computer Vision interfaces, namely biological vision, mathematical and computational paradigms for biological and human vision, computational and hardware models of the visual brain and bio-inspired methods for computer vision.
The organizers,
Olivier Faugeras and Pierre Kornprobst
INRIA, Neuromathcomp project team
Sophia Antipolis, France
From the simplest vision architectures in insects to the extremely complex cortical hierarchy in primates, it is fascinating to observe how biology found efficient solutions to solve vision problems. Pioneers in computer vision had this dream to build machines that could match and perhaps outperform human vision. This goal has not been reached, at least not on the scale that was originally planned, but the field of computer vision has met many other challenges from an unexpected variety of applications and fostered entirely new scientific and technological areas such as computer graphics and medical image analysis. However, modeling and emulating with computers biological vision largely remains an open challenge while there are still many outstanding issues in computer vision.
The aim of this workshop is to bring together researchers from the fields of biological and computer vision, computational neuroscience, and psychophysics, have them present their latest results and discuss how an interdisciplinary approach could foster new advances in science and technology at the interface between neuroscience and computer science. This will provide a cross-fertilization ground that will hopefully stimulate the emergence of new ideas and collaborations among scientists coming from different horizons.
This workshop will be a one-day event with prestigious invited speakers discussing several aspects of biological and computer Vision interfaces, namely biological vision, mathematical and computational paradigms for biological and human vision, computational and hardware models of the visual brain and bio-inspired methods for computer vision.
The organizers,
Olivier Faugeras and Pierre Kornprobst
INRIA, Neuromathcomp project team
Sophia Antipolis, France
Other CFPs
- 1st International Workshop on Re-Identification (Re-Id 2012)
- 4th International Workshop on Video Event Categorization, Tagging and Retrieval(VECTaR 2012)
- The PASCAL Visual Object Classes Challenge 2012 (VOC2012) Workshop
- The Workshop on Computer Vision for the Web
- Workshop on Web-scale Vision and Social Media
Last modified: 2012-06-11 23:23:45