ResearchBib Share Your Research, Maximize Your Social Impacts
Sign for Notice Everyday Sign up >> Login

CVPR 2014 - The Tenth Embedded Vision Workshop (CVPR 2014)

Date2014-06-28

Deadline2014-03-12

VenueColumbus, USA - United States USA - United States

Keywords

Websitehttp://cvisioncentral.com/promotion/evw2014

Topics/Call fo Papers

Recent years have witnessed a significant increase in the use of embedded systems for vision.Applications range from accurate, performance-centric systems to high volume, low-cost, light weight and energy efficient consumer devices. Computer vision has been deployed in many applications, for example, in video search and annotation, surveillance, computer-aided surgery, for gesture and body movement detection in video games, to assist drivers in automotive safety and for in-home monitoring of vulnerable persons. Embedded computer vision is part of a growing trend towards developing low-cost “smart sensors” that use local “analytics” to interpret data, passing on relatively high level alerts or summary information via network connectivity. Embedded vision applications are built upon advances in vision algorithms, embedded processing architectures, advanced circuit technologies, and new electronic system design methodologies. They are implemented on embedded processing devices and platforms such as field programmable gate arrays (FPGAs), programmable digital signal processors (DSPs), graphics processing units (GPUs), and various kinds of heterogeneous multi-core devices. They are developed under significant resource constraints of processing, memory, power, size, and communication bandwidth that pose significant challenges to attaining required levels of performance and speed, and frequently exploit the inherent parallelism of the specialized platforms to address these challenges. Given the heterogeneous and specialized nature of these platforms, efficient development methods are an important issue.
The Embedded Vision Workshop (EVW) aims to bring together researchers working on vision problems that share embedded system characteristics. Research papers are solicited in, but not limited to, the following topics:
Analysis of vision problems specific to embedded systems.
Analysis of embedded systems problems specific to computer vision.
Embedded computer vision for robotics
New trends in programmable processors and their computational models.
Applications of and algorithms for embedded vision on standard parallelized platforms such as GPUs (PC, embedded and mobile).
Applications of and algorithms for embedded vision on reconfigurable platforms such as FPGAs.
Applications of and algorithms for embedded computer vision on programmable platforms DSPs and multicore SoC such as the Cell Processor.
Applications of embedded computer vision on mobile devices including phones.
Biologically-inspired vision and embedded systems
Computer vision applications distributed between embedded devices and servers
Social networking embedded computer vision applications
Educational methods for embedded computer vision
User interface designs and CAD tools for embedded computer vision applications
Hardware enhancements (lens, imager, processor) that impact computer vision applications
Software enhancements (OS, middleware, vision libraries, development tools) that impact embedded computer vision application
Methods for standardization and measurement of computer vision functionality as they impact embedded computer vision
Performance metrics for evaluating embedded systems performance.
Hybrid embedded systems combining vision and other sensor modalities
All of the previous Workshops on Embedded (Computer) Vision (ECVW and EVW) were held in conjunction with CVPR, with the exception for the fifth which was held in conjunction with the 2009 ICCV. These events were very successful. Selected papers workshops have been published in two special issues of major journals (EURASIP Journal on Embedded Systems and CVIU) and in a Springer monograph titled Embedded Computer Vision. The Workshop is now renamed Embedded Vision (EVW) to reflect changes in the field.
Important Dates
Paper submission: March 12, 2014
Notification to the authors: April 14, 2014
Camera ready paper: May 6, 2014
Organizing Committee
General Chairs:
Goksel Dedeoglu
Texas Instruments
Fridtjof Stein
Daimler
Program Chairs:
Stefano Mattoccia
University of Bologna, Italy
Jagadeesh Sankaran
Texas Instruments
Steering Committee:
Branislav Kisacanin
Interphase
Margrit Gelautz
Vienna University of Technology
Sek Chai
SRI International
Andrew Hunter
University of Lincoln, UK
Ahmed Nabil Belbachir
AIT Austrian Institute of Technology
Abbes Amira
University of the West of Scotland
Web Master:
Yu Wang
www.cvisioncentral.com
Program Committee (Tentative):
Senyo Apewokin, Texas Instruments
Kofi Appiah, Lincoln U.
Sebastiano Battiato, U.of Catania
Moshe Ben-Ezra, Microsoft
Faycal Bensaali, U.of Hertsfordshire
Shuvra Bhattacharyya, U.of Maryland
Terry Boult, U.of Colorado
Xin Chen, Navteq
Rita Cucchiara, U of Modena and Reggio Emilia
Orazio Gallo, nVidia
Eduardo Gudis, SRI
Antonio Haro, Navteq
Martin Humenberger, AIT
David Ilstrup, Honda Research Institute
Masatoshi Ishikawa, U.of Tokyo
Rongrong Ji, Columbia U.
Kihwan Kim, nVidia
Kevin Koeser, ETH Zurich
Zhu Li, Hong Kong Polytechnic U.
Abelardo Lopez-Lagunas, ITESM
Larry Matthies, JPL
Darnell Moore, Texas Instruments
Andre Morin, Lyrtech
Vittorio Murino, Istituto Ital.di Tecn.
Rajesh Narasimha, MetaIO
Zoran Nikolic, Texas Instruments
Burak Ozer, Verificon
Hassan Rabah, University of Lorraine
Bernhard Rinner, Klagenfurt U.
Sankalita Saha, NASA
Mainak Sen, Cisco Systems
Vinay Sharma, Apple
Dabral Shashank, Texas Instruments
Salvatore Vitabile, U.of Palermo
Linda Wills, Georgia Tech
Ruigang Yang, U. of Kentucky

Last modified: 2014-01-23 23:29:29