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Advances in Visual Computing

5th International Symposium, ISVC 2009, Las Vegas, NV, USA, November 30 - December 2, 2009, Proceedings, Part II

  • Conference proceedings
  • © 2009

Overview

Part of the book series: Lecture Notes in Computer Science (LNCS, volume 5876)

Included in the following conference series:

Conference proceedings info: ISVC 2009.

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Table of contents (113 papers)

  1. Computer Graphics III

  2. Visualization II

  3. Detection and Tracking

  4. Reconstruction II

Other volumes

  1. Advances in Visual Computing

  2. Advances in Visual Computing

Keywords

About this book

It is with greatpleasure that we present the proceedings of the 5th International Symposium on Visual Computing (ISVC 2009), which was held in Las Vegas, Nevada. ISVC o?ers a common umbrella for the four main areas of visual c- puting includingvision,graphics,visualization,andvirtualreality.Thegoalisto provide a forum for researchers, scientists, engineers, and practitioners throu- out the world to present their latest research ?ndings, ideas, developments, and applications in the broader area of visual computing. This year, the program consisted of 16 oral sessions, one poster session, 7 special tracks, and 6 keynote presentations. Also, this year ISVC hosted the Third Semantic Robot Vision Challenge.The responseto the call for papers was verygood;wereceivedover320submissionsfor themainsymposiumfromwhich we accepted 97 papers for oral presentation and 63 papers for poster presen- tion. Special track papers were solicited separately through the Organizing and Program Committees of each track. A total of 40 papers were accepted for oral presentation and 15 papers for poster presentation in the special tracks. All papers were reviewed with an emphasis on potential to contribute to the state of the art in the ?eld. Selection criteria included accuracy and originality of ideas, clarity and signi?cance of results, and presentation quality. The review process was quite rigorous, involving two to three independent blind reviews followed by several days of discussion. During the discussion period we tried to correct anomalies and errors that might have existed in the initial reviews.

Editors and Affiliations

  • Department of Computer Science and Engineering, University of Nevada, Reno, USA

    George Bebis

  • NASA Ames Research Center, Moffett Field, USA

    Richard Boyle

  • Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, USA

    Bahram Parvin

  • Desert Research Institute, Reno, USA

    Darko Koracin, Daniel Coming

  • Graduate School of Science and Engineering, Saitama University, 338-8570, Japan

    Yoshinori Kuno

  • Microsoft Research, Redmond, USA

    Junxian Wang

  • Univ. of Zurich, Department of Informatics, Zurich, Switzerland

    Renato Pajarola

  • Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, Livermore, USA

    Peter Lindstrom

  • University of Applied Sciences Bonn-Rhein-Sieg, Sankt Augustin, Germany

    André Hinkenjann

  •  ,  

    Miguel L. Encarnação

  • SCI Institute & School of Computing, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, USA

    Cláudio T. Silva

Bibliographic Information

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