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             ICCV'05 Workshop on Dynamical Vision
               October 21, 2005, Beijing, China

     http://decision.csl.uiuc.edu/~yima/ICCV05-workshop.html


The classical multiple-view geometry studies the case with a
moving camera viewing a static scene. Many real-world applications however
require the modeling and reconstruction of a scene that
has much more complex dynamics. That is, the scene may consist of
multiple moving objects (e.g., a traffic scene) or articulate
motions (e.g., a walking human) or even non-rigid dynamics (e.g.,
smoke, fire, waterfall). To study the problems of reconstructing
different dynamical scenes, many new algebraic, geometric,
statistical, and computational tools have recently emerged in
computer vision, computer graphics, image processing, and
vision-based control.

The goal of this workshop is to converge different aspects of
the research on dynamical vision and identify common mathematical
problems, models, and methods for future research in this emerging new
topic. The workshop welcomes papers that fall into the
following categories:

  a. Segmentation, Estimation, Tracking of Multiple Rigid-Body
     Motions.
     - Based on Optical Flows or Image Gradients
     - Based on Feature Correspondences
     - Integrated Approaches and Hybrid Motion Models

  b. Segmentation, Estimation, Tracking of Articulate and/or
     Non-Rigid Motions.
     - Human Motions
     - Non-Rigid Motions

  c. Identification and Recognition of Dynamical Scenes from
     Videos.
     - Dynamical Textures
     - Video Segmentation

  d. Mathematical Tools for Modeling, Analysis, and Synthesis
     of Dynamical Scenes.
     - Subspace Methods and High-Order Tensors
     - Dynamical Systems
     - Stochastic Models (e.g. Hidden Markov Models)

  e. Applications of Dynamical Vision (e.g., Surveillance,
     Graphics, and Robotics, etc.)
     - Visual Servoing and Vision-Based Control & Navigation
     - Localization and Mapping


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Important Dates:

   Submission deadline:        July 1, 2005
   Notification of acceptance: August 15, 2005
   Camera ready:               September 1, 2005
   Workshop date:              October 21, 2005


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Submission Guidelines:

Please submit your paper by midnight (your local time) July 1st, 2005 in
PDF format via the web-based submission link soon to be given at:

     http://decision.csl.uiuc.edu/~yima/ICCV05-workshop.html

(Email submission can be offered as an alternative upon early
request by the authors).

Paper should not exceed 8 pages in IEEE format (the standard ICCV or CVPR
style). All submissions are subject to a double-blind review
process by the program committee. Therefore, the papers should be
strictly anonymous. In the submission email, please provide the
following info (for the organizers only):

1. Title of your paper:
2. Authors and their affiliations
3. Contact info (email, phone, fax) of the corresponding author(s).


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Organizers and Contact Information:

   Prof. Anders Heyden
   School of Technology and Society, Malmo University,
   heyden@ts.mah.se

   Prof. Yi Ma
   ECE Department., University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign,
   yima@uiuc.edu

   Prof. Rene Vidal
   Biomedical Engineering Department, Johns Hopkins University
   rvidal@cis.jhu.edu

You may send your questions regarding the workshop to any of the
organizers.


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Members of the Program Committee (incomplete list):

Yiannis Aloimonos, University of Maryland
Serge Belongie, University of California at San Diego
Noah Cowan, Johns Hopkins University
Kostas Daniilidis, University of Pennsylvania
Ahmed Elgammal, Rutgers University
Ruggero Frezza, University of Padova, Italy
Bijoy Ghosh, Washington University at St. Louis
Greg Hager, Johns Hopkins University
Richard Hartley, Australia National University, Australia
Kun Huang, Ohio State University
Joao Hespanha, University of California at San Diego
Rolf Johansson, Lund University, Sweden
Fredrik Kahl, Lund University, Sweden
Kenichi Kanatani, Okayama University, Japan
Jana Kosecka, George Mason University
Nemanja Petrovic, NEC Inc.
Marc Pollefeys, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Shankar Sastry, University of California at Berkeley
Stefano Soatto, University of California at Los Angeles
Harry Shum, Microsoft Research in Asia, China
Peter Sturm, INRIA Rhône-Alpes, France
Yin Wu, Northwestern University
Jie Zhou, Tsinghua University, China