Speaker – Thiago da Silveira & Cláudio Jung

Thiago L. T. da Silveira & Cláudio Jung
Institute of Informatics, Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul (Brazil)

       

Foundations, Challenges, and Applications of Spherical Images

Language: English

Date: November 18th / 09h00 – 11h00 (GMT-3)

 

Abstract

Spherical images and video are widespread due to the popularization of capture and visualization devices. Unlike traditional pinhole-based, spherical media are defined on the surface of a sphere, have a full field of view (FoV), and store light intensities from an entire scene. Besides classical applications, those exploring immersive augmented, mixed, and virtual reality enormously benefit from full-FoV vision. Although spherical images lie on the sphere, they are often mapped to one or many planes. Those sphere-to-plane mappings lead to distortions, which may degrade the quality of traditional visual computing algorithms. This talk revises the spherical imaging model, standard capturing device types, and common representation formats. It also discusses the prominent challenges in spherical image processing and showcases the advances in selected applications.

Biography

Thiago Lopes Trugillo da Silveira is an Assistant Professor (“Adjunct Professor”) at the Institute of Informatics from the Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul (UFRGS), Brazil. He holds a Ph.D. degree in Computer Science (2019) from UFRGS, an M.Sc. degree in Computer Science (2016), and B.Sc. degrees in Information Systems (2015) and Computer Science (2013) from the Federal University of Santa Maria (UFSM), Brazil. Thiago is a Member of the Brazilian Computer Society (SBC) and a researcher of the Signal Processing Group @ Stats and the Computer Graphics, Image Processing, and Interaction Group. His current interests include signal, image, and video processing, pattern recognition, and computer vision.

Cláudio Rosito Jung received the B.S. and M.S. degrees in Applied Mathematics, and the Ph.D. degree in Computer Sciences, from Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul (UFRGS), Brazil, in 1993,1995 and 2002, respectively. He is currently an Associate Professor at UFRGS in the Computer Science department and was a visiting faculty at the University of Pennsylvania from July 2015 to July 2016. His research interests include several aspects of image processing, computer vision, and pattern recognition. He has been a TPC member or reviewer for several image processing and computer vision conferences and journals. He has been an Associate Editor for the journal IEEE Transactions on Image Processing since December 2021.