Colloquium Computer Science, Prof. Justus Piater
Date: Monday, February 25th 2013
Speaker:
Prof. Justus Piater
Intelligent and Interactive Systems
https://iis.uibk.ac.at/
Institute of Computer Science, University of Innsbruck, Austria
Room: 5161.0267 (Bernoulliborg)
Time: 16.00
Title:
Hierarchical Models and Visual Inference in Humans and Machines
Abstract:
While the computational details of human vision remain largely obscure,
it is clear that at least some important aspects of vision proceed by
successive abstraction over multiple levels from retinotopic feature
representations to high-level concepts. While this general idea has a
great deal of appeal to computational scientists, it is far from clear
how to turn it into practical systems. One may argue that this lack of
understanding slows progress in both computer vision and high-level
visual neuroscience. In this talk I will review key aspects of
biological vision that are relatively well understood, and will describe
our own attempt at building a hierarchical vision system. At each
level, it constructs spatial distributions of juxtapositions of features
or parts. Each level presents to the level above an abstraction of the
level below, while presenting to the level below its own idea of what
should be seen in the scene given the level above's scene
interpretation. Together, these spatial distributions form a layered
Markov network that models visual recognition as a bidirectional
probabilistic inference procedure that seeks consensus between stored
models and perceived stimuli at all levels of the hierarchy.
http://www.rug.nl/research/jbi/news/colloquia/computer-science/colloquium-computer-science_-prof.-justus-piater
Colloquium coordinators are Prof.dr. M. Aiello (e-mail : M.Aiello rug.nl) and
Prof.dr. M. Biehl (e-mail: M.Biehl rug.nl)
www.cs.rug.nl/~biehl/Coll
Last modified: | 10 February 2021 1.31 p.m. |
More news
-
16 April 2024
UG signs Barcelona Declaration on Open Research Information
In a significant stride toward advancing responsible research assessment and open science, the University of Groningen has officially signed the Barcelona Declaration on Open Research Information.
-
02 April 2024
Flying on wood dust
Every two weeks, UG Makers puts the spotlight on a researcher who has created something tangible, ranging from homemade measuring equipment for academic research to small or larger products that can change our daily lives. That is how UG...
-
18 March 2024
VentureLab North helps researchers to develop succesful startups
It has happened to many researchers. While working, you suddenly ask yourself: would this not be incredibly useful for people outside of my own research discipline? There are many ways to share the results of your research. For example, think of a...