FIRST CALL FOR PAPERS: POCV 2006

The Fifth IEEE Computer Society Workshop on Perceptual Organization in
Computer Vision

New York City June 22, 2006, In Conjunction with IEEE CVPR 2006
http://elderlab.yorku.ca/pocv

IMPORTANT DATES:

 * Submission deadline: 11:59pm EST, March 17, 2006
 * Notification: April 17, 2006
 * Final versions of accepted papers due: April 24, 2006

THEME:

Perceptual Organization is the process of establishing a meaningful relational
structure over raw visual data, where the extracted relations correspond to
the physical structure of the scene. A driving motivation behind perceptual
organization research in computer vision is to deliver representations needed
for higher-level visual tasks such as object detection, object recognition,
activity recognition and scene reconstruction. Because of its wide
applicability, the potential payoff from perceptual organization research is
enormous.

The 5th IEEE POCV Workshop, to be held in conjunction with CVPR 2006 (New
York), will bring together experts in perceptual organization and related
areas to report on recent research results and to provide ideas for future
directions.

PREVIOUS IEEE POCV WORKSHOPS:

 * 2004 CVPR (Washington, DC)
 * 2001 ICCV (Vancouver, Canada)
 * 1999 ICCV (Crete, Greece)
 * 1998 CVPR (Santa Barbara, CA)

SCOPE:

Papers are solicited in all areas of perceptual organization, including but
not limited to:

 * image segmentation
 * feature grouping
 * texture segmentation
 * contour completion
 * spatiotemporal/motion segmentation
 * figure-ground discrimination
 * integration of top-down and bottom-up methods
 * perceptual organization for object or activity detection/recognition
 * unification of segmentation, detection and recognition
 * biologically-motivated methods
 * neural basis for perceptual organization
 * learning in perceptual organization
 * graphical methods
 * natural scene statistics
 * evaluation methods

ALGORITHM EVALUATION:

Research progress in perceptual organization depends in part on quantitative
evaluation and comparison of algorithms. Authors reporting results of new
algorithms are strongly encouraged to objectively quantify performance and
compare against at least one competing approach.

BROADER ISSUES:

Perceptual organization research faces a number of challenges. One is defining
what the precise goal of perceptual organization algorithms should be. What
kind of representation should they deliver? What databases should be used for
evaluation? How can we quantify performance to allow objective evaluation and
comparison between algorithms? How do we know when we've succeeded? To try to
meet these challenges, we particularly encourage contributions of a more
general nature that attempt to address one or more of these questions. These
may include definitional papers, theoretical frameworks that might apply to
multiple different perceptual organization problems, establishment of useful
databases, modeling of underlying natural scene statistics, evaluation
methodologies, etc.

BIOLOGICAL MOTIVATION:

Much of the current work in perceptual organization in computer vision has its
roots in qualitative principles established by the Gestalt Psychologists
nearly a century ago, and this link between computational and biological
research continues to this day. Following this tradition, we specifically
invite biological vision researchers working in the field of perceptual
organization to submit work that may stimulate new directions of research in
the computer vision community.

WORKSHOP OUTPUT:

All accepted papers will be included in the Electronic Proceedings of CVPR,
distributed on DVD at the conference, and will be indexed by IEEE Xplore. We
are also exploring the possibility of a special journal issue on perceptual
organization in computer vision, with a separate call for papers.

PAPER SUBMISSION:

Submission is electronic, and must be in PDF format. Papers must not exceed 8
double-column pages. Submissions must follow standard IEEE 2-column format of
single-spaced text in 10 point Times Roman, with 12 point interline space. All
submissions must be anonymous. Please us the IEEE Computer Society CVPR format
kit. Stay tuned for exact details on how to submit.

In submitting a paper to the POCV Workshop, authors acknowledge that no paper
of substantially similar content has been or will be submitted to another
conference or workshop during the POCV review period. For further details and
updates, please see the workshop website: http://elderlab.yorku.ca/pocv

WORKSHOP CHAIRS:

James Elder, York University
jelder@yorku.ca

Jeffrey Mark Siskind, Purdue University
qobi@purdue.edu

PROGRAM COMMITTEE:

Ronen Basri, Weizmann Institute, Israel
Kim Boyer, Ohio State University, USA
James Coughlan, Smith-Kettlewell Institute, USA
Sven Dickinson, University of Toronto, Canada
Anthony Hoogs, GE Global Research, USA
David Jacobs, University of Maryland, USA
Ian Jermyn, INRIA, France
Ben Kimia, Brown University, USA
Norbert Kruger, Aalborg University, Denmark
Michael Lindenbaum, Technion, Israel
Zili Liu, University of California, Los Angeles, USA
David Martin, Boston College, USA
Gerard Medioni, University of Southern California, USA
Zygmunt Pizlo, Purdue University, USA
Sudeep Sarkar, University of South Florida, USA
Eric Saund, Palo Alto Research Centre, USA
Kaleem Siddiqi, McGill University, Canada
Manish Singh, Rutgers University, USA
Shimon Ullman, Weizmann Institute, Israel
Johan Wagemans, University of Leuven, Belgium
Song Wang, University of South Carolina, USA
Rich Zemel, University of Toronto, Canada
Song-Chun Zhu, University of California, Los Angeles, USA
Steve Zucker, Yale University, USA

--
James H. Elder
Associate Professor
Centre for Vision Research
York University
4700 Keele Street
North York, Ontario
Canada M3J 1P3

tel: (416) 736-2100  ext. 66475
fax: (416) 736-5857

email: jelder@yorku.ca
www.yorku.ca/jelder