BMVA
British Machine Vision Association and Society for Pattern Recognition

Call for Participation
3D Video: Analysis, Display and Applications
http://www.bmva.ac.uk/meetings

One Day BMVA symposium, London, UK on 6th February, 2008

Chairs: Dr. David Marshall (Cardiff University), Prof. Adrian Hilton
(University of Surrey), Prof. Stephen Richmond (Cardiff University),
Prof. Bob Fisher (Edinburgh University)

Recent advances in camera technology and computing power have made the
acquisition of fast frame rate 3D video feasible : some commercial
systems have even been produced. However, subsequent 3D video processing
and analysis tools are still fairly embryonic. Whilst it is possible to
utilise existing 3D computer vision and image processing tools to
perform some tasks, no off-the-shelf processing packages have been
developed and indeed it is still an open ended research issue in to how
such data may be processed and analysed effectively.

However, the potential for 3D video in entertainment, multimedia,
security, medical and many other application areas is great. 3D imaging
has many advantages over 2D image and the same potential now exists in
the video domain. For example, humans readily recognise emotion and even
identity in a the dynamics of a human facial motion, modelling the
dynamics of how faces age/change over time has huge potential in film,
forensics and medical applications and, also, in a medical domain the
potential to detect the onset of certain diseases, such as muscle
wasting diseases and strokes, in 3D dynamic facial data.

Emerging display technologies allow for the direct input of 3D video
data, although issues still arise as to how to efficiently utilise more
traditional displays. Rendering and visualisation of 3D video has many
applications, for example, in rendering a person's dynamic facial
appearance before and after corrective surgery. In a more traditional
sense, the visualisation of two dimensional video sequences in a 3D
video space is a related issue with applications in surveillance and
security, for example. The areas of multiview 3D reconstruction and view
synthesis for 3D video are also relevant.

The aim of this meeting is to provide a forum for the discussion of
recent results in 3D video creation, processing/analysis, visualisation
and display technologies and applications.

Please submit an extended summary of about one A4-sized page (no longer
than two pages) in length (PDF preferred). Send contributions by email
attachment (1Mb max please!) to Dr David Marshall
9 mailt:dave@cs.cardiff.ac.uk ) by Friday December 14th, 2007.