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June 2020
EGSR 2020
The 31st Eurographics Symposium on Rendering 29 June - 2 July 2020 London, UK Imperial College London and University College London Eurographics Symposium on Rendering The 31st edition of Eurographics Symposium on Rendering returns once again (after 19 years!) to London, and will be held from June 30th to July 2nd, 2020. The main venue for EGSR 2020 is the South Kensington campus of Imperial College London (right next to multiple Museums, Royal Albert Hall, and Hyde Park), and it…
Find out more »May 2016
Imaging in Graphics, Vision and Beyond
Royal Society International Scientific Seminar Kavli Royal Society International Center Chicheley Hall, Buckinghamshire Ricoh Theta 360 panorama, courtesy Paul Debevec Purpose: The aim of the seminar is to bring together researchers in various disciplines spanning computer graphics, computer vision, cultural heritage, remote sensing and bio-photonics to discuss common interests in various imaging techniques as well as current challenges, and to explore potential cross-domain collaborations. Programme May 4th, 2016 4:30pm onwards Arrival of attendees at…
Find out more »December 2015
RGI-GRAPH 2015
Internal symposium of the Realistic Graphics and Imaging (RGI) group for presentations and discussions on ongoing projects.
Find out more »July 2015
Koki Nagano, USC-ICT – Skin Microstructure Deformation using Displacement Map Convolution
Koki Nagano, a PhD student at the USC Institute for Creative Technologies working with Prof. Paul Debevec is visiting the RGI group on July 30th, 2015 and giving a talk on our SIGGRAPH 2015 paper: Skin Microstructure Deformation using Displacement Map Convolution Koki Nagano, Graham Fyffe, Oleg Alexander, Jernej Barbic, Hao Li, Abhijeet Ghosh, Paul Debevec ACM Trans. Graphics (Proc. SIGGRAPH), 2015. http://gl.ict.usc.edu/Research/SkinStretch/ Speaker: Koki Nagano Day/Date: Thursday, 30th July 2015 Time: 11:30am Rm: Hux 218 Speaker Bio: Koki…
Find out more »November 2014
Tim Weyrich, UCL – Computational Analysis in Cultural Heritage Applications
Abstract Through the increasing availability of high-quality consumer hardware for advanced imaging tasks, digital imaging and scanning are gradually pervading general practice in cultural heritage preservation and archaeology. In most cases, however, imaging and scanning are predominantly means of documentation and archival, and digital processing ends with the creation of a digital image or 3D model. At the example of two projects, the speaker will demonstrate how careful analysis of the underlying cultural-heritage questions allows for bespoke solutions that--through joint development of imaging procedures, data…
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