Imperial College London > Talks@ee.imperial > COMMSP Seminar > One-shot shape acquisition technique and its medical applications

One-shot shape acquisition technique and its medical applications

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Abstract:

In this talk, I will introduce an overview of my research projects on 3D shape acquisition of moving object and its medical applications. The talk mainly focuses on two parts, the first one is about our 3D shape acquisition technique using projector camera systems and the second is a high-speed and ultra-small 3D scanner for medial applications. I also briefly cover the followingtopics: —Theory of shape from coplanarity technique —Texture recovery method on pro-cam system —Multi-view active stereo system.

Those researches are jointly researched with Prof. Katushi Ikeuchi (Univ.of Tokyo), Prof. Ryo Furukawa (Hiroshima city Univ) and Prof. Ryusuke Sagawa (AIST).

Short bio: Full professor of Department of Information and Biomedical Engineering at Kagoshima University, Japan. His current research focus is on a 3D capturing technique of moving objects and its application on VR and AR systems. He received a Ph.D. degree from University of Tokyo, Japan, in 2003 (Advising professors were Prof. Katsushi Ikeuchi and Prof. Masao Sakauchi). He started working at Kagoshima university in 2010. Prior to Kagoshima university, he worked at Saitama university. He also researched at Columbia univ. as visiting researcher in 2012, INRIA Rhone Alpes with Peter Sturm in 2009 and Microsoft Research Redmond with Sing Bing Kang and Richard Szeliski in 2000. He has published over 100 research papers including ICCV , CVPR, IJCV , 3DV/3DIM/3DPVT, Eurographics and MVA in computer vision and computer graphics and won several awards including Songde Ma Outstanding Paper Award (best paper for ACCV ) in 2007, best paper award on PSIVT in 2009, Nagao Prize (best paper on MIRU ) in 2011 and yearly best paper award on IPSJ in 2013. He is a member of IPSJ , IEICE, and IEEE .

This talk is part of the COMMSP Seminar series.

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