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Item Eurographics(Blackwell Publishers Ltd and the Eurographics Association, 2000)Item Eurographics(Blackwell Publishers Ltd and the Eurographics Association., 2001)Item What can Computer Graphics expect from 3D Computer Vision?(The Eurographics Association and Blackwell Publishing Ltd, 2007) Sara, RadimComputer Vision is a discipline whose ultimate goal is to interpret optical images of real scenes. It is well understood that such a problem is cursed by ambiguity of interpretation and uncertainty of evidence. Despite imperfectness of results due to the scenes never following our prior models exactly, Computer Vision has achieved a significant progress in the past two decades.This talk will outline the quest of 3D Computer Vision by describing a processing pipeline that receives a heap of unorganized images from unknown cameras and produces a consistent 3D geometric model together with camera calibrations. We will see how new algorithms allow the standard conception of the pipeline as a series of independent processing steps gradually transform to a single complex, yet efficient vision task. We will identify some points where linking Computer Vision and Computer Graphics would bring significant progress.Item Eurographics Ireland 2002 Workshop(Blackwell Publishers, Inc and the Eurographics Association, 2002) O'Sullivan, CarolItem New Eurographics Fellow(Blackwell Publishers, Inc and the Eurographics Association, 2002)Item Network Service(2004)Item Rendering: Input and Output(Blackwell Publishers Ltd and the Eurographics Association, 2001) Rushmeier, H.Rendering is the process of creating an image from numerical input data. In the past few years our ideas about methods for acquiring the input data and the form of the output have expanded. The availability of inexpensive cameras and scanners has influenced how we can obtain data needed for rendering. Input for rendering ranges from sets of images to complex geometric descriptions with detailed BRDF data. The images that are rendered may be simply arrays of RGB images, or they may be arrays with vectors or matrices of data defined for each pixel.The rendered images may not be intended for direct display, but may be textures for geometries that are to be transmitted to be rendered on another system. A broader range of parameters now need to be taken into account to render images that are perceptually consistent across displays that range from CAVEs to personal digital assistants. This presentation will give an overview of how new hardware and new applications have changed traditional ideas of rendering input and output.Item Join Now!(Blackwell Publishers, Inc and the Eurographics Association, 2002)Item Eurographics Spain 11th Conference(Blackwell Publishers, Inc and the Eurographics Association, 2002) Isern, Jordi RegincosItem Color Section(Blackwell Publishers Ltd and the Eurographics Association., 2002)