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VISION-LIST Digest Volume 14 Issue 23
VISION-LIST Digest Tue Jun 13 18:30:20 PDT 95 Volume 14 : Issue 23
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Today's Topics:
Wangs' email addresses.
Video Boards
Job openings at ECRC, Munich, Germany
Re: Post-Doc Available
PhD STUDENTSHIP: Multimedia-Based Personnel Identification
Visual'96 Call for Papers
CFP: Symposium on Document Analysis and Information Retrieval
Trends in Document Image Analysis (Woskshop)
CAIP'95 Sept 6-8, 1995 Prague,Preliminary Program
Final Call for PBMCV'95
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Date: Tue, 6 Jun 1995 19:31:36 GMT
From: Fionnuala Ross <fross>
Organization: Computing Science Dept., Glasgow University, Glasgow, Scotland
Subject: Wangs' email addresses.
I would like to contact Yuan-Fang Wang and Jin-Fang Wang, the authors of the
paper "Surface Reconstruction Using Deformable Models with Interior and
Boundary Constraints", but I don't have any information about them. If anyone
knows their email addresses or where they work I would be very grateful.
------------------------------
Date: Tue, 13 Jun 1995 10:29:52 -1000
From: "Herbert L. Roitblat" <roitblat@uhunix.uhcc.Hawaii.Edu>
Subject: Video Boards
Does someone have a list of effective video boards that can be used with
a PC with windows? We need to do some frame by frame analysis and need
hardware compression. We can use either VL, PCI, or ISA
busses. VL and ISA are most convenient.
Thanks.
Herbert Roitblat, Ph.D.
Professor of Psychology roitblat@uhunix.uhcc.hawaii.edu
University of Hawaii (808) 956-6727 (808) 956-4700 fax
2430 Campus Road, Honolulu, HI 96822 USA
[ Please everyone post your recommendation so that we can
------------------------------
Date: Tue, 13 Jun 1995 14:45:57 GMT
From: hiring@ecrc.de (Hiring committee)
Subject: Job openings at ECRC, Munich, Germany
Organization: European Computer-Industry Research Centre GmbH, Munich, Germany
Status: RO
JOB OPENINGS
June 13, 1995
The European Computer-Industry Research Centre (ECRC) seeks talented
computer scientists/engineers to support two major European
Commission-funded research projects in augmented reality. The
positions are available immediately.
Job Description:
The candidate will be a member of the User Interaction and
Visualization group, which conducts research and develops advanced
systems that incorporate interactive graphics, computer vision, and
multimedia. The candidates will implement various computer
graphics/image processing algorithms required for the EC projects.
They will also develop the applications needed to demonstrate the
projects' results. These positions stress technical knowledge,
creativity, and self-sufficiency, as well as a desire to investigate
new technologies and problem solutions. The current EC-funded
projects will explore augmented reality for use in design and
construction.
Education:
Masters degree (or equivalent, e.g., German Diploma) in Computer
Science/Engineering, Electrical Engineering, or a related field.
Bachelor's level candidates with appropriate work experience will also
be considered.
Experience:
A strong programming background in C++ and Unix is required.
Programming knowledge of real-time devices or interactive systems is
also desirable. The ideal candidate will have experience in one or
more of the following areas:
1) Pixel/image processing,
2) Interactive 3D graphics, with a working knowledge of one
or more graphics libraries, such as GL, OpenGL, or XGL,
3) Numerical analysis/computing
4) Support for C++ development environments, including device
interfaces, and software management, configuration and
installation.
How to Apply:
To apply, send a resume, the names and addresses of at least three
references, your telephone number and e-mail address to the address
listed below. Only written applications will be considered.
ECRC is an international research centre supported by a consortium of
companies and also strongly supported by the European Commission. Its
mission is to conduct research and to develop advanced applications
which are of strategic importance to industry. Active research areas
include distributed computing and communication, user interaction and
visualization (augmented reality), and advanced information access and
retrieval. Approximately 40 researchers from 20 different nations
work at the centre. ECRC offers competitive salaries and excellent
benefits. English is the working language of the centre.
ECRC is located in Munich, Germany. Munich and its surroundings is
one of Europe's high-tech centres, with numerous computer and
manufacturing companies, and a major technical university located in
the area. Munich is also a great place to live. It is home to the
world famous Oktoberfest and numerous other festivals, close to the
Alps and surrounded by numerous lakes. Culturally, Munich offers a
variety of museums, art galleries, and concert venues. Munich is also
centrally located for travel to other parts of Europe.
Write to:
Recruiting Committee
European Computer-Industry Research Centre
Arabellastrasse 17
D-81925 Munich
Germany
WWW address: http://www.ecrc.de/
Recruiting Committee
European Computer-Industry Research Centre tel. : +(49)(89) 92699-0
Arabellastrasse 17 fax. : +(49)(89) 92699-170
------------------------------
Date: Fri, 9 Jun 1995 09:20:25 -0400
From: tarr-michael@CS.YALE.EDU (Michael Tarr)
Subject: Re: Post-Doc Available
POST-DOCTORAL POSITION
Psychophysical and computational approaches
to human object recognition
Department of Cognitive and Linguistic Sciences, Brown University
Position available for two years as a post-doctoral fellow working on
psychophysical and computational approaches to human object recognition.
Primary affliation will be in Michael Tarr's lab in the Department of
Cognitive and Linguistic Sciences at Brown University. Facilities
include SGI workstations, PowerMacintoshes, and a variety of software
and hardware for conduction visual perception experiments. Postdoc will
be expected to participate in ongoing research projects in the lab as
well as developing their own research directions. Some programming
experience a plus. Cognitive and Linguistics Sciences is a very
interdisciplinary department that has several other researchers that
emphasize human perception. There are also specialists in neural nets,
learning, speech pereption, linguistics, and development. The department
also has close ties to the Neuroscience and Psychology departments, both
of which have researchers that work in vision.
Approximate start date: Sept 1, 1995
Contact: Michael Tarr
(203) 432-4637
tarr@cs.yale.edu
(I will be moving to Brown as of July 1)
------------------------------
Date: Fri, 9 Jun 1995 18:53:12 +0100
From: T.Tan@reading.ac.uk (Tieniu Tan)
Subject: PhD STUDENTSHIP: Multimedia-Based Personnel Identification
PhD STUDENTSHIP
DEPARTMENT OF COMPUTER SCIENCE, UNIVERSITY OF READING, UK
Multimedia-Based Personnel Identification
Accurate personnel identification is crucial in many industrial applications.
Current approaches include speaker identification (using voice), writer
identification (using handwriting), and face recognition (using intensity
images). The main objective of this project is to investigate the combined use
of speech, handwriting and face images (i.e., fusion of multimedia data) for
flexible, robust and accurate personnel identification.
Applicants for the studentship should hold or expect to hold a good honours
degree (or an MSc) in a relevant discipline. Good mathematical ability and
programming skills are essential. Previous knowledge of pattern recognition/
image processing/computer vision would be desirable.
The studentship is fully funded for 3 years, with a starting total of 8470 GBP
in 1995-96. This covers the student's fees at the Home postgraduate rate (2430
GBP in 1995-96) and a stipend (6040 GBP in 1995-96) paid in quarterly
instalments. Applications should be made AS SOON AS POSSIBLE and the preferred
start date will be October 1995.
For an informal discussion please contact Dr Tieniu TAN by phone 01734 318610
or email T.Tan@reading.ac.uk. Further details and an application form are
obtainable from:
Dr Tieniu TAN
Department of Computer Science
The University of Reading
Reading RG6 6AY, UK
Tel: 01734 318610
Fax: 01734 751994
Email: T.Tan@reading.ac.uk
URL: http://www.cs.reading.ac.uk
------------------------------
Date: Thu, 8 Jun 1995 00:03:09 GMT
From: zheng@matilda.vut.edu.au (Zheng Zhi Jie)
Organization: Victoria University of Technology
Subject: Visual'96 Call for Papers
Keywords: Visual Information System
Call for Papers
First International Conference on Visual Information Systems
VISUAL '96
5-6 February 1996
Melbourne, Victoria
AUSTRALIA
Aims and Scope
With the widespread use of multimedia information, there is a pressing
requirement to efficiently manage, store, manipulate and retrieve images
and pictorial data in a wide spectrum of applications. As many organisations
currently maintain large collections of images, the need for flexible visual
information management is already critical. Future information systems in
commercial and scientific applications will have a high visual content, and
it is necessary to integrate the visual and image components into the
architecture of organisational information systems. Such visual components
will tend to permeate all information systems and in time will not be regarded
as a distinct element, but will form an essential part of any information
system, working alongside and in harmony with structured information
processing components. The conference will focus attention on the management
of visual information and will include, but is not restricted to, the
following topics:
* Architecture of visual information systems
* Data modelling for visual information systems
* Memory organisation and management
* Feature recognition and extraction
* Feature and content indexing
* Picture description and representation languages
* Query model and paradigms for visual information
* Query language for visual information retrieval
* Content-based search and retrieval
* Integration of visual and non-visual information
* Compression and delivery of visual information
* Image processing and manipulation
* Parallel processing in visual information systems
* Specific applications areas of visual information systems
Both work in progress as well as fully developed systems will be of interest
to the conference.
Keynote Addresses:
Shi-Kuo Chang, University of Pittsburgh, USA
Tosiyasu Kunii, University of Aizu, Japan
Paper Submission:
Authors should submit three copies of an extended abstract consisting of
between two and four pages to the Program Chair. The abstract should
include the authors' names, affiliation, telephone and fax numbers, postal
and email addresses, and provide sufficient details to allow the merits of
the paper to be assessed. Authors are encouraged to submit the abstracts
electronically in Postscript form to visual96@matilda.vut.edu.au.
Abstracts will be reviewed internationally. Detailed instructions for
manuscript preparation will be sent at the time of acceptance
notification, and are also available from the Web page (see Further
Information).
Accepted papers must be presented at the Conference with the presenting author
registering as a delegate in order for the paper to be included in the
proceedings. Conference proceedings will be published and distributed to
participants at the conference. It is also planned to publish the papers in
book form after the conference.
Important Dates:
Expression of interest: 2 September 1995
Extended abstract due: 2 October 1995
Notification of acceptance: 3 November 1995
Camera ready paper due: 11 December 1995
Conference: 5-6 February 1996
Organising Chair:
Audrey Tam
Department of Computer & Mathematical Sciences
Victoria University of Technology
PO Box 14428, MMC
Melbourne, Victoria 3000, AUSTRALIA
Email: amt@matilda.vut.edu.au
Program Chair:
Clement Leung
Department of Computer & Mathematical Sciences
Victoria University of Technology
PO Box 14428, MMC
Melbourne, Victoria 3000, AUSTRALIA
Email: amt@matilda.vut.edu.au
Program Committee:
David Bell, University of Ulster
Terry Caelli, Curtin University of Technology
Alfonso Cardenas, University of California, Los Angeles
Shi-Kuo Chang, University of Pittsburgh
Francis Chin, University of Hong Kong
Roland Chin, Hong Kong University of Science & Technology
Bill Cody, IBM Almaden Research Center
John Debenham, University of Technology Sydney
Tharam Dillon, LaTrobe University
Borko Furht, Florida Atlantic University
Ricki Goldman-Segall, University of British Columbia
Bill Grosky, Wayne State University
Ramesh Jain, University of California, San Diego
Kingsley Nwosu, AT&T Bell Laboratories
Tosiyasu Kunii, University of Aizu
Zhi-Qiang Liu, University of Melbourne
Wo-shun Luk, Simon Fraser University
Song De Ma, Chinese Academy of Science
Erich Neuhold, T.H. Darmstadt
P. Venkat Rangan, University of California, San Diego
Nalin Sharda, Victoria University of Technology
Bala Srinivasan, Monash University
Imants Svalbe, Monash University
Paul Swatman, Swinburne University of Technology
Rodney Topor, Griffith University
Zhi Jie Zheng, Victoria University of Technology
Expression of Interest:
Please respond by 2 September 1995
Name:....................................................................
Title First Initial(s) Last
Organisation:..........................................................
Address:
...............................................................................
Email:.....................................................................
Tel: (..........).......................................................
Fax: (..........)..........................................................
[] I plan to attend Visual '96. Please send me registration information.
[] I plan to attend Visual '96 and present my work as a poster.
[] I plan to attend Visual '96 and submit a paper on the following topic:
.................................................................
................................................................
.................................................................
[] I may not be able to attend Visual '96, but would like to order the
Proceedings.
Further Information:
Further information and updates are available on the World Wide Web at:
http://dingo.vut.edu.au/~visual96
or by contacting:
Visual '96 Conference Secretariat
Department of Computer & Mathematical Sciences
Victoria University of Technology
PO Box 14428, MMC
Melbourne, Victoria 3000, AUSTRALIA
Email: visual96@matilda.vut.edu.au
Tel: +61 3 688 4249 Fax: +61 3 688 4050
------------------------------
Date: Wed, 07 Jun 1995 16:27:40 -0700
Subject: CFP: Symposium on Document Analysis and Information Retrieval
From: Andrew D Bagdanov <beleg@mighty-joe.ISRI.UNLV.EDU>
Call for Papers SDAIR '96
Fifth Annual Symposium on
Document Analysis and Information Retrieval
April 15-17, 1996
Alexis Park Resort, Las Vegas, Nevada
SPONSOR
Information Science Research Institute
University of Nevada, Las Vegas
SYMPOSIUM CHAIR
Henry S. Baird
AT&T Bell Laboratories
henry.baird@att.com
PROGRAM CHAIRS
Document Analysis:
Andreas Dengel
German Research Center for
Artificial Intelligence (DFKI)
dengel@dfki.uni-kl.de
Information Retrieval:
Jan Pedersen
Xerox Palo Alto Research Center
pedersen@parc.xerox.com
SYMPOSIUM SECRETARY
Mary C. Guirsch
University of Nevada, Las Vegas
Information Science Research Institute
4505 Maryland Parkway
Box 454021
Las Vegas, NV 89154-4021
(702)895-4571
(702)895-1183 (fax)
sdair@isri.unlv.edu
SCOPE
The purpose of this symposium is to present results of state-of-the-art
research and to encourage the exchange of ideas in the general field of
automatic extraction of information from images of printed documents.
Papers are solicited on all aspects of document image analysis and
information retrieval, both theoretical and applied, with particular
emphasis on:
Document Analysis:
High-Accuracy Transcription
Postprocessing of OCR Results
Keyword Search in Textual Images
Multilingual OCR, Language ID, etc.
Geometric and Logical Layout Analysis
Recognition of Forms, Tables and Equations
Models of Document Image Degradation
Methods for Performance Evaluation
Information Retrieval:
Full-Text Retrieval
Retrieval from OCR'ed Text
Image and Multimedia Retrieval
Text Categorization
Retrieval from Structured Documents
Language-Specific Influences on Retrieval
Evaluation of IR Systems
Text Representation
Papers on subjects in the intersection of these two areas will be given
priority.
SUBMISSIONS
Please send five copies of complete papers, with the corresponding author's
name, postal address, telephone and fax numbers and e-mail address, to the
appropriate Chair:
Andreas Dengel, Chair (Document Analysis)
c/o Information Science Research Institute
University of Nevada, Las Vegas
4505 Maryland Parkway
Box 454021
Las Vegas, NV 89154-4021
Jan O. Pedersen, Chair (Info. Retrieval)
c/o Information Science Research Institute
University of Nevada, Las Vegas
4505 Maryland Parkway
Box 454021
Las Vegas, NV 89154-4021
Manuscripts should be no longer than 20 double-spaced pages or 5,000 words
and should not already have been accepted for publication by another
conference or journal, nor should they be submitted elsewhere during the
SDAIR'96 review period. Both camera-ready paper and machine-readable
source copies of accepted papers will be required. The proceedings will
be available at the conference.
CONFERENCE TIMETABLE
Papers Due September 30, 1995
Notification To Authors December 1, 1995
Camera Ready and Machine Readable Copy January 15, 1996
DOCUMENT ANALYSIS COMMITTEE:
Andreas DENGEL, Chair, German Research Center for
Artificial Intelligence
Norbert BARTNECK, Daimler Benz Research Center
Hiromichi FUJISAWA, Hitachi Central Research Lab
Jonathan HULL, Ricoh California Research Center
Junichi KANAI, University of Nevada, Las Vegas
Larry SPITZ, Consultant, Palo Alto, CA
Suzanne TAYLOR, Loral Research Laboratory
Karl TOMBRE, INRIA Lorraine
INFORMATION RETRIEVAL COMMITTEE:
Jan PEDERSEN, Chair, Xerox Palo Alto Research Center
Susan DUMAIS, Bellcore
Stephen GALLANT, Belmont, Inc.
Donna HARMAN, National Institute of Standards & Technology
Marti HEARST, Xerox Palo Alto Research Center
David LEWIS, AT&T Bell Laboratories
Peter SCHAUBLE, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology (ETH)
Kazem TAGHVA, University of Nevada, Las Vegas
Yiming YANG, Mayo Clinic/Foundation
------------------------------
Date: 7 Jun 1995 14:52:54 GMT
From: samal@cse.unl.edu (Ashok Samal)
Organization: University of Nebraska--Lincoln
Subject: Trends in Document Image Analysis (Woskshop)
TRENDS IN DOCUMENT IMAGE ANALYSIS
A Two-Day Workshop Sponsored by
Center for Communication and Information Science,
Nebraska Technology Development Corporation, and
UNL Department of Computer Science and Engineering
July 27 and 28, 1995
9:00 a.m. - 4:30 p.m.
Cornhusker Hotel
333 South 13th Street
LINCOLN, NEBRASKA
ABOUT THE WORKSHOP
Presentations and discussions with leading researchers in the field of
imaging, optical character recognition and document analysis.
The workshop will include presentations by guest speakers as well as
opportunities to participate in smaller group discussions with individual
speakers. The current and potential applications of Optical Character
Recognition / Document Image Analysis (OCR/DIA) will be addressed by a panel
of our speakers. A second panel will discuss the role of OCR/DIA on the World
Wide Web.
LIST OF SPEAKERS
Jonathan Hull
Head, Document Analysis Research Group
Ricoh, Menlo Park, California
Optical Character Recognition, Handwriting Recognition
Suzanne Liebowitz Taylor
Loral Corporation, Paoli, PA
Classification and Function Decomposition of Multilingual Business
Correspondence
George Nagy
Professor, Rensselaer Polytechnic
OCR Challenges and Performance Evaluation
Gary Kopec
Xerox, Palo Alto Research Center
Document Image Decoding with Yellow Pages and Other Applications
Larry O'Gorman
AT&T Bell Laboratories
Murray Hill, New Jersey
Image Analysis and Digital Library
David Justin Ross
RAF Technology, Redmond, Washington
Use of Context to Enhance OCR Performance in Large Scale Conversions.
WHO SHOULD ATTEND
Researchers, strategic business and information technology planners,
students and university faculty, entrepreneurs and others interested
in the conversion of text and graphics to machine readable form for
information retrieval and archival in automated banking, insurance,
postal and other paper intensive industries.
GOAL OF THE WORKSHOP
The workshop will bring together top researchers in the area of
optical character recognition (OCR) & document image analysis (DIA).
It will also provide an opportunity for businesses in the information
technology areas that could profitably apply these disciplines to
explore the current state of the research.
Students that are interested in this leading edge technology and the prospects
for research and career opportunities are strongly urged to attend. The
workshop format, with both lecture and discussion groups and panels, will
allow for many opportunities for close interaction among the speakers and the
participants.
This workshop is an excellent opportunity to learn about current
technical research in OCR/DIA. It provides particular insight into
the current state of OCR & DIA application as well as future potential
for areas that will require further development.
GENERAL INFORMATION
Registration will begin at 8:30 a.m. on Thursday, July 27. Coffee and rolls
will be served during registration. The conference will start promptly at
9:00 a.m. each day. Lunch will be served at 12:00 noon and is included in the
general registration fee. (Student registration includes refreshments only.
Meal coupons are available for purchase if requested.)
Parking in the Lincoln City garage, adjacent to the conference hotel, is 50
cents per hour or $4.00 for a day. Anyone requiring overnight stay at the
hotel or needing more information about the workshop, should contact
Dr. Sharad Seth (402) 472-5003, or Dr. Ashok Samal (402) 47202217, or send FAX
to (402) 472-1718.
REGISTRATION
The workshop is partially funded by UNL's Center for Communication and
Information Science, Nebraska Technology Development Corporation, and the
Department of Computer Science and Engineering. The registration fee is
intended to cover the cost of meals and refreshments.
General Registration:
(includes meals and refreshments)
- before June 22, 1995 $30.00
- after June 22, 1995 $50.00
Student Registration: $ 5.00
(includes only refreshments)
REGISTRATION FORM
Please register me for
TRENDS IN DOCUMENT IMAGE ANALYSIS
July 27 and 28, 1995
Cornhusker Hotel
333 South 13th Street
LINCOLN, NEBRASKA
Name: _________________________________________
Title: ________________________________________
Address: ______________________________________
City, State, Zip: _____________________________
Phone: (_____)_____________________
FAX: (_____)_____________________
Mail Check and Registration to:
Donna McCarthy
Center for Communication and Information Science
213C Ferguson Hall
University of Nebraska
Lincoln, NE 68588-0156
Checks should be made payable to UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA-LINCOLN.
Checks must be received prior to attending the workshop.
This announcement and further updates about the workshop can be found on WWW.
WWW URL : http://cse.unl.edu/~samal/workshop.html.
Ashok Samal
------------------------------
Date: Tue, 13 Jun 95 14:11:50 +0200
From: hlavac@prip.tuwien.ac.at (Vasek Hlavac)
Subject: CAIP'95 Sept 6-8, 1995 Prague,Preliminary Program
6th INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE CAIP '95, Prague, Czech Republic
September 6-8, 1995
SCIENTIFIC PROGRAM (preliminary)
Tuesday September 5, 1995
20:00-21:30 Icebreaker Party
Wednesday September 6, 1995
08:45-09:00 Opening
09:00-10:00 Invited Talk: Takeo Kanade
10:00-10:20 Coffee break
10:20-11:40 2 parallel oral sessions A1, B1
11:40-13:10 Lunch
13:10-14:20 Poster session A
14:20-14:40 Coffee break
14:40-15:40 2 parallel oral sessions A2, B2
15:40-16:00 Coffee break
16:00-17:00 2 parallel oral sessions A3, B3
19:00-23:00 Concert, banquet
Thursday September 7, 1995
09:00-10:00 Invited Talk: Josef Kittler
10:00-10:20 Coffee break
10:20-11:40 2 parallel oral sessions A4, B4
11:40-13:10 Lunch
13:10-14:20 Poster session B
14:20-14:40 Coffee break
14:40-15:40 2 parallel oral sessions A5, B5
15:40-16:00 Coffee break
16:00-17:00 2 parallel oral sessions A6, B6
17:30 Walk, beer party
Friday September 8, 1995
09:00-10:00 Invited Talk: Shimon Ullman
10:00-10:20 Coffee break
10:20-11:40 2 parallel oral sessions A7, B7
11:40-13:10 Lunch
13:10-14:10 2 parallel oral sessions A8, B8
14:10-14:30 Coffee break
14:30-15:30 2 parallel oral sessions A9, B9
15:30 Conference closing
17:00 Sightseeing
INVITED TALK Wednesday, 9:00-10:00
Spatial and Feature Space Clustering: Applications in
Image Analysis
Josef Kittler and George Matas
SESSION A1: INVARIANTS
Wednesday, 10:20-11:40
Groups for Grouping
Luc Van Gool, Theo Moons, and Marc Proesmans
Invariant Standard Positions of Ordered Sets of Points
Irene Rothe and Herbert Suesse
Skew-Symmetry Detection via Invariant Signatures
Alfred M. Bruckstein and Doron Shaked
Efficient Matching of Space Curves
Tomas Pajdla and Luc Van Gool
SESSION B1: SEGMENTATION AND GROUPING
Wednesday, 10:20-11:40
A Complexity Space for Curve Grouping
Benoit Dubuc and Steven W. Zucker
Segmentation in Scale Space
Rolf D. Henkel
An Unsupervised Region Growing Method for 3D Image Segmentation
Franco Chiavetta and Vito Di Gesu
Segmentation of Images for Environmental Studies by using a Simple
Markov/Gibbs Random Field Model
Georgy Gimel'farb and Nelly Kovalevskaya
SESSION A2: OPTICAL FLOW
Wednesday, 14:40-15:40
Optical Flow Computation in the Log-Polar Plane
Kostas Daniilidis and Volker Krueger
Computation of 3D-Motion Parameters using the Log-Polar Transform
Kostas Daniilidis
A Statistical Regularization Framework for Estimating Normal Displacements
along Contours with Subpixel Accuracy
Yann Ricquebourg and Patrick Bouthemy
SESSION B2: MODEL RECOVERY AND PARAMETER ESTIMATION
Wednesday, 14:40-15:40
ExSel++: A General Framework to Extract Parametric Models
Markus Stricker and Ales Leonardis
Generic 3D Shape Model: Acquisitions and Applications
Xinquan Shen and David Hogg
Guidelines for Choosing Optimal Parameters of Elasticity for Snakes
Ole Vilhelm Larsen, Petia Radeva, and Enric Marti
SESSION A3: TRACKING
Wednesday, 16:00-17:00
Tracking Surfaces via Texture-Mapping: A Boot-Strapping Approach
Alistair J. Bray
Motion-Based Identification of Deformable Templates
Christoph Schnoerr and Wladimir Peckar
Extending the Point Distribution Model using Polar Coordinates
Tony Heap and David Hogg
SESSION B3: SCENE AND OBJECT REPRESENTATION
Wednesday, 16:00-17:00
Intermediate Views for Face Recognition
Michael S. Lew, Alfred C. She, and Thomas S. Huang
Rendering Real-World Objects using View Interpolation
Tomas Werner, Roger David Hersch, and Vaclav Hlavac
Modelling 3-D Rigid Solid Objects Using The View Signature II Representation
Scheme
Peter A. R. Cole and M. Shamim Khan
INVITED TALK Thursday, 9:00-10:00
(topic will be announced)
Takeo Kanade
SESSION A4: STRUCTURE FROM MOTION
Thursday, 10:20-11:40
An Automatic and Robust Algorithm for Determining Motion and Structure
from Two Perspective Images
Zhengyou Zhang
3-D Scene Reconstruction from Image Sequences
H. V. Nguyen and M. Hanajik
Triangulation
Richard I. Hartley and Peter Sturm
3D Surface Reconstruction Using Occluding Contours
Edmond Boyer and Marie Odile Berger
SESSION B4: LOW LEVEL VISION: TEXTURE, IMAGE REDUNDANCY AND
SIMILARITY
Thursday, 10:20-11:40
Image Redundancy and Classification
Espen Volden, Gerard Giraudon, and Marc Berthod
Towards a Measure of Diversity between Gray-Scale Images
Valery V. Starovoitov
Pattern Orientation and Texture Symmetry
Dmitry Chetverikov
Multiscale Texture Enhancement
Joachim Weickert
SESSION A5: MOTION DETECTION
Thursday, 14:40-15:40
Spatio-Temporal Robust Motion Estimation and Segmentation
Benoit Duc, Philippe Schroeter, and Josef Biguen
A New Spatiotemporal Approach for Image Analysis. Application to Motion
Detection
Alice Caplier and Franck Luthon
Dense Non-Rigid Motion Estimation in Sequences of Medical Images using
Differential Constraints
Serge Benayoun and Nicholas Ayache
SESSION B5: LOW LEVEL VISION I
Thursday, 14:40-15:40
Topological and Geometrical Corners by Watershed
Laurent Najman and Regis Vaillant
Crest Lines Detection by Valleys Spreading
E. Piegay, N. Selmaoui, and C. Leschi
The Distance Transform for Line Patterns: Generalisation and Development
Tony P. Pridmore and Sergey V. Ablameyko
SESSION A6: APPLICATIONS: MOTION DETECTION AND TRACKING
Thursday, 16:00-17:00
Mobile Detection Based on Histogram Difference
D. Maravall, J. A. Sanandres, and L. Baumela
Particle Tracking in Space Time Sequences
Frank Hering, Michael Merle, Dietmar Wierzimok, and Bernd Jaehne
Plant Tracking-Based Motion Analysis in a Crop Field
J. M. Sanchiz, F. Pla, J. A. Marchant, and R. Brivot
SESSION B6: LOW LEVEL VISION II
Thursday, 16:00-17:00
An Adaptive k-NN Rule Based on Dempster-Shafer Theory
L. M. Zouhal and T. Denoeux
Shadows, Defocus and Reliable Estimation
James Elder and Steven Zucker
Estimating the Initial Values of Unobservable Variables in Visual Probabilistic
Networks
Chee-Keong Kwoh and Duncan Fyfe Gillies
INVITED TALK Friday, 9:00-10:00
Object Recognition and Classification
Shimon Ullman
SESSION A7: STRUCTURE AND MATCHING
Friday, 10:20-11:40
Relational Matching with Active Graphs
Richard C. Wilson and Edwin R. Hancock
Matching Delaunay Triangulations by Relaxation Labelling
Andrew M. Finch, Richard C. Wilson, and Edwin R. Hancock
Approximate String Matching by Finite Automata
Borivoj Melichar
Affine Matching of Intermediate Symbolic Representations
Axel Pinz, Manfred Prantl, and Harald Ganster
SESSION B7: APPLICATIONS: MEDICINE AND BIOLOGY
Friday, 10:20-11:40
Automatic Classification of Skin Tumours with High Resolution Surfaces
Profiles
Th. Ross, H. Handels, J. Kreusch, H. Busche, H. H. Wolf, and S. J. Poeppl
4-Dimensional Modelling of the Human Heart
Edilberto Strauss and Peter Burger
Structure Adaptive Anisotropic Filtering for MR Image Enhancement
G. Z. Yang, P. Burger, D. N. Firmin, and S. R. Underwood
In Situ Determination of Cell Concentration in Bioreactors with a new Depth
from Focus Technique
T. Scholz, B. Jaehne, H. Suhr, G. Wehnert, P. Geissler, and K. Schneider
SESSION A8: ACTIVE VISION, SHADING
Friday, 13:10-14:10
Closing the Loop: Pursuing a Moving Object by a Moving Observer
Peter Nordlund and Tomas Uhlin
An Algorithm for a Linear Shape from Shading Problem
Ryszard Kozera
Isophotes the Physical Key to Tractable Local Shading Analysis
Radim Sara
SESSION B8: HUMAN FACE RECOGNITION AND TRACKING
Friday, 13:10-14:10
Efficient High Order Neural Network for Rotation, Translation and Distance
Invariant Recognition of Gray Scale Images
Rafal Foltyniewicz
Learning Human Face Detection in Cluttered Scenes
Kah-Kay Sung and Tomaso Poggio
Head Pose Computation for Very Low Bit-rate Video Coding
Ricardo Lopez and Thomas S. Huang
SESSION A9: CALIBRATION AND POSE ESTIMATION
Friday, 14:30-15:30
Self-Calibration of an Affine Camera from Multiple Views
Long Quan and Roger Mohr
Stereo Calibration by Planar Grid Lines
A. Polanski, K. Wojciechowski and A. Borek
Monocular Pose Estimation of Circular Primitives
R. Neubauer and K. Voss
SESSION B9: CONTOUR
Friday, 14:30-15:30
A New Method of Extracting Closed Contours Using Maximal Discs
Gabriele Lohman
A Simple Algorithm to Evaluate the Local Symmetry at Each Point of a Closed
Contour
Jose M. Inesta Quereda and Mateo Buendia Gomez
On Boundary Approximation
Fridrich Sloboda and Bedrich Zatko
POSTER SESSION A
Wednesday, 13:10-14:20
Texture Classification of Mouse Liver Cell Nuclei Using Invariant Moments of
Connected Consistent Regions
Fritz Albregtsen, Helene Schulerud, and Luren Yang
Text Recognition from Grey Level Images Using Hidden Markov Models
Kjersti Aas, Line Eikvil, and Tove Andersen
New Models of Image Restoration
Artiom Grigorian
An Improved Model of Snakes for Model-Based Segmentation
Petia Radeva, Joan Serrat, and Enric Marti
The Weighted Backprojection Techniques of Image Reconstruction
I. G. Kazantsev
Fusion of Bayesian Estimation and MTF Inversion Techniques for Improved
Array Imaging in Scattering Media
Yuri V. Shkvarko and Alexey S. Netjukhailo
Case Based Reasoning for Image Interpretation
Petra Perner
Classification of Corrosion Images by Wavelet Signatures and LVQ Networks
S. Livens, P. Scheunders, G. Van De Wouwer, D. Van Dyck, H. Smets, J.
Winkelmans, and W. Bogaerts
Knowledge Acquisition for Image Analysis using Hypermedia Interface
Boiko Balev, Arnold Bloemer, and Oliver Dehning
Interpretation of Printed Forms for Blind People
Torsten Ihle, Helmut Schirmer, and Siegfried Fuchs
Automatic Segmentation of Boundaries in Line Segment and Circular Arcs
G. Schmid, L. Altamirano Robles, and W. Eckstein
Moment-Based Affine-Invariant Fitting of Elliptical Segments
K. Voss, H. Suesse, and R. Neubauer
Compression of Binary Images Based on Covering
Vito Di Gesu, Salvatore Mantaci, and Gaetano Tortorici
Motion Detection with Fuzzy Logic in Real-Time
V. Gustin, A. Lapajne, and M. Cufer
Use of Explicit Knowledge for the Reconstuction of 3-D Object Geometry
C.-E. Liedtke, O. Grau, and S. Growe
Detecting Grey Level Symmetry: the Frequency Domain Approach
Yossi Gofman and Nahum Kiryati
A New Method to Threshold Images of Flat Binary Scenes under Uneven
Lighting
Leszek Luchowski
Improving Snake Performance via a Dual Active Contour
Steve R. Gunn and Mark S. Nixon
SMD Position Measurement by a Kohonen Network Compared with Image
Processing
Robert P. W. Duin and Edwin Th. G. Hoek
Estimating Feature Discriminant Power in Decision Tree Classifiers
I. Gracia, F. Pla, F. J. Ferri, and P. Garcia
Surface Tracking by Statistical Contour Dispersal
Nigel G. Sharp and Edwin R. Hancock
On Feature Selection via Rough Sets
Ludmila I. Kuncheva and Roumen K. Kounchev
Tree Neural Classifier for Character Recognition
Jan Voracek
Multiscale Extraction and Representation of Features from Medical Images
Marta Fidrich and Jean-Philippe Thirion
Line Representation of Elongated Shapes
M. Frucci and A. Marcelli
Fast Computation of 3-D Geometric Moments Using a Discrete Gauss Theorem
Luren Yang, Fritz Albregtsen, and Torfinn Taxt
On the Group Algebras' Hierarchy Pertaining to the Parametrization of Fast
Algorithms of Discrete Orthogonal Transforms
V. M. Chernov
Understanding of Ridge-Valley Lines on Image-Intensity Surfaces in
Scale-Space
Supoj Chinveeraphan, Satoshi Watanabe, Ryo Takamatsu, and Makoto Sato
Computer Analysis and Recognition of Cognitive Phase Space Electrocardio-
graphic Image
Leonid Fainzilberg and Tatiana Potapova
A New Algorithm for Probabilistic Relaxation based on the Baum Eagon
Theorem
A. J. Stoddart, M. Petrou, and J. Kittler
Segmentation and Estimation of the Optical Flow
Adrian G. Bors and Ioannis Pitas
Automated Detection of Fluorescent Cells and Measurement of their
DNA-Content
W. Boecker, H.-W. Gantenberg, W.-U. Mueller, and C. Streffer
A Highly Selective HT-Based Algorithm for Detecting Extended, Almost
Rectilinear Shapes
Rita Cucchiara and Fabio Filicori
Invariants and Object Modelling Using Clifford Algebra
Eduardo Bayro-Corrochano and Gerald Sommer
Joint Invariants of a Triplet of Coplanar Conics: Stability and
Discriminating Power for Object Recognition
Francoise Veillon, Long Quan, and Peter Sturm
Using Mirror Cameras for Estimating Spatial Depth
Jens Arnspang, Henrik Nielsen, Morten Christensen, and Knud Henriksen
Combining Head Tracking and Pupil Monitoring in Vision-Based
Human-Computer Interaction
C. Colombo, A. Del Bimbo, and S. De Magistris
Active-Camera Calibration Using Iterative Image Feature Localization
W. Brent Seales and David Eggert
POSTER SESSION B
Thursday, 13:10-14:20
Projective Invariants for Polygons
Tomas Suk and Jan Flusser
A Multi-Model Image Line Reconstruction
Michal Haindl and Stanislava Simberova
Tools for Automatic Recognition of Character Strings in Maps
Line Eikvil, Kjersti Aas, and Marit Holden
Towards Higher Decimation Ratios
Walter G. Kropatsch
Digital Plane Parametrization by Least Squares Fits
Reinhard Klette, Ivan Stojmenovic, and Jovisa Zunic
A Supervised Approach to the Evaluation of Image Segmentation Methods
Luren Yang, Fritz Albregtsen, Tor Lonnestad, and Per Grottum
Experimental Investigation on Editing k-NN Rule by a Genetic Algorithm
Ludmila I. Kuncheva and Yordan K. Yotzov
Heterogeneous Morphing of Multimodal Medical Information
Vojtech Jankovic, Eugen Ruzicky, and Eduard Groeller
Recognition and Pose Determination of 3-D Objects Using Multiple Views
Ales Leonardis, Stane Kovacic, and Franjo Pernus
Bayesian Extraction of Differential Surface Structure
M. Turner and E. R. Hancock
A Proposal for the Implementation of a Parallel Watershed Algorithm
A. Meyster and J. B. T. M. Roerdink
A Neural Network Energy Minimization Approach to Approximation of
2-Dimensional Shapes
Todd Law, Hidenori Itoh, and Hirohisa Seki
Visual Detection of Defects in Moulded Plastic Drippers
A. Anzalone and A. Machi'
Segmentation Modeling
Anthony Hoogs and Ruzena Bajcsy
Inverting the Reflectance Map with Binary Search
Francois Faure
Feature Selection for the Tree-Wavelet Transform
P. L. Palmer, N. Fatemi-Ghomi, and M. Petrou
Performance Comparison of a Deterministic and a Stochastic Method for Image
Classification
Shan Yu and Konrad Weigl
Advances in the Statistical Methodology for the Selection of Image Descriptors
for Visual Pattern Representation and Classification
Pavel Pudil, Jana Novovicova, Francesco Ferri, and Josef Kittler
Affine Stereo Calibration
Peter Sturm and Long Quan
Triple Features for Linear Distorted Images
Alexander Kadyrov
Finding Postirradiation Reaction in Lungs from Digitized X-rays
L. Chmielewski, E. Chmielewska, M. Sklodowski, W. Cudny,
and J. Skoczylas
Estimating Time to Contact with Curves, Avoiding Calibration and Aperture
Problem
Jens Arnspang, Knud Henriksen, and Robert Stahr
Constraining Probabilistic Relaxation with Symbolic Attributes
Mohamad Hatef and Josef Kittler
Local Fourier Phase and Disparity Estimates: An Analytical Study
Atsuto Maki, Lars Bretzner, and Jan-Olof Eklundh
Direct Obstacle Detection and Motion from Spatio-Temporal Derivatives
Paer Fornland
Direct Estimation of Rotation from Two Frames via Epipolar Search
Sebastien Roy and Ingemar J. Cox
Dynamic Character Recognition Using an Elastic Matching
Fidimahery Andrianasy and Maurice Milgram
Visual Robot Guidance for an Insertion Task
Dorin Ungureanu, Luc Van Gool, and Theo Moons
Robust Surface Reconstruction from Stereo SEM Images
Drahomira Janova and Jiri Jan
Adaptive Wavelets for Signal Analysis
Jaroslav Kautsky and Radka Turcajova
A Common Framework for Preattentive and Attentive Vision using Steerable
Filters
Markus Michaelis, Rainer Herpers, and Gerald Sommer
Static Global Scheduling for Optimal Computer Vision and Image Processing
Operations on Distributed-Memory Multiprocessors
Cheolwhan Lee, Yuan-Fang Wang, and Tao Yang
Robust Patch Concept for Egomotion Estimation
Christoph Herwig and Hans-Otto Carmesin
Parallel Thinning Algorithm Based on the Wave Propagation Model
Franck Xia
Film Editing Reconstruction and Semantic Analysis
J. M. Corridoni and A. Del Bimbo
Measuring Time-to-Contact Using Active Camera Control
W. Brent Seales
The Color Constancy Problem: An Illumination Invariant Mapping Approach
Rafael Wiemker
========================================================================
CONFERENCE SECRETARIAT
Dr. Eva Matyskova
Czech Technical University
Faculty of Electrical Engineering
Karlovo nam. 13
121 35 Praha 2
Czech Republic
Phone: +42-2-2435 7465 Fax: +42-2-290 159
FURTHER INFORMATION
E-mail: caip95@vision.felk.cvut.cz
FTP: ftp://novell.felk.cvut.cz/caip95
WWW: http://sgi.felk.cvut.cz/~vision/cvl/cvl.html
CONFERENCE CHAIRS
Ruzena Bajcsy University of Pennsylvania, USA
Gerald Sommer Christian-Albrechts-Universitaet Kiel, Germany
LOCAL ORGANIZER
Vaclav Hlavac Czech Technical University Prague
REGISTRATION FEE
until July 15, 1995 late
regular 490,- DEM 560,- DEM
student 360,- DEM 410,- DEM
student without
proceedings 265,- DEM 315,- DEM
IAPR_member 460,- DEM 530,- DEM
The full registration fee includes participation in all CAIP '95
professional activities, proceedings, three lunches, the conference
reception, and parties. Cancellations received in writing before
August 15, 1995 will be entitled to a refund minus a 15% processing
fee. No fees will be returned for cancellation requests received
after August 15, 1995.
ACCOMMODATION
An accommodation will be available in the hotel KRYSTAL (within five
minutes walking distance from the conference place):
Hotel KRYSTAL (C***)
Jose Martiho 2/407
160 00 Praha 6 - Veleslavin
Czech Republic
Phone +42-2-316 2761 Fax +42-2-316 4215
Single and double rooms with bathroom are available. The hotel
rooms for the time of the conference should be booked through
the conference secretariat, which implies slightly lower prices.
All prices are including breakfast:
during the conference before or after
(four nights) the conference
Single room 60,- DEM per night 75,- DEM per night
Double room 80,- DEM per night 100,- DEM per night
The accommodation should be paid together with the registration fee
to the same account. Cancellations will be accepted and refunded if
received by August 31, 1995.
Accommodation for participants and accompanying persons before and/or
after the conference can also be booked through the conference
secretariat if done before July 15, 1995.
------------------------------
Date: 7 Jun 1995 03:47:17 GMT
From: dnm@graphics.upenn.edu (Dimitris Metaxas)
Organization: Center for Human Modeling and Simulation
Subject: Final Call for PBMCV'95
The following is the final program for the 1995 IEEE Workshop on
Physics-Based Modeling in Computer Vision. The workshop will be held
in conjunction with the International Conference on Computer Vision
(ICCV'95) on June 18 and 19 in Cambridge, MA. For information about
registration and accommodation for the workshop look at the end of
the announcement.
ORGANIZING COMMITTEE
GENERAL CHAIRS
Thomas S. Huang Dimitri Metaxas
Dept. of Electrical Dept. of Computer
and Computer Engineering and Information Science
University of Illinois University of Pennsylvania
Urbana, Illinois 61801 Philadelphia, PA 19104-6389
huang@ifp.uiuc.edu dnm@central.cis.upenn.edu
PROGRAM CHAIR
Demetri Terzopoulos
Dept. of Computer Science
University of Toronto
Toronto, Ontario
CANADA M5S 1A4
dt@vis.toronto.edu
PROGRAM CO-CHAIRS
Alok Gupta Sang Wook Lee
Siemens Corporate Research, Inc. Dept. of Electrical Engineering
755 College Road East and Computer Science
Princeton, NJ 08540 University of Michigan
alok@scr.siemens.com Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI 48109
swlee@eecs.umich.edu
*******************************************************************************
1995 IEEE WORKSHOP ON PHYSICS-BASED MODELING IN COMPUTER VISION
FINAL PROGRAM (with PANEL participants)
JUNE 18-19, CAMBRIDGE, MA
JUNE 18
8-8:30
REGISTRATION AND BREAKFAST
8:30-8:45
OPENING REMARKS
8:45-10:45
SESSION 1: SHAPE ESTIMATION
Surface Approximation of Complex Multipart Objects
C-W. Liao and G. Medioni
Volumetric Segmentation of Medical Images by Three-Dimensional Bubbles
H. Tek and B.B. Kimia
Model Based Part Segmentation of Range Data _ Hyperquadrics and
Dividing Planes
S. Kumar and D. Goldgof
3D Scene Representation Using a Deformable Surface
A. Hilton and J.G.M. Goncalves
10:45 -12noon
PANEL 1: PHYSICS-BASED SEGMENTATION, SHAPE, AND MOTION ESTIMATION
CHAIR: D. Metaxas (UPENN)
PANELISTS: N. Ayache (INRIA), R. Bajcsy (UPENN), J. Duncan (Yale U),
D. Goldgof (U. South Florida), A. Gupta (SIEMENS), A. Pentland (MIT),
D. Terzopoulos (U. of Toronto), B. Vemuri (U. of Florida),
L. Wolff (Johns Hopkins U)
12noon-1:15pm
LUNCH
1:15-3:15pm
SESSION 2: IR, SAR, AND INVARIANTS
A Physics-Based Approach for Detecting Man-Made Objects in
Ultra-Wideband SAR Imagery
R. Kapoor and N. Nandhakumar
Model-Based Image Enhancement of Far Infra-Red Images
R. Highnam and M. Brady
Thermophysical Affine Invariants from IR Imagery for Object
Recognition
N. Nandhakumar, V. Velten, and J. Michel
Physics-like Invariants for Vision
I. Weiss
3:15-3:30pm
BREAK
3:30-5:30
SESSION 3: NONRIGID MOTION ANALYSIS
Physical-Model Based Reconstruction of the Global Instantaneous
Velocity Field from Velocity Measurements at a Few Points
D. Derou, J.M. Dinten, L. Herault, and J.J. Niez
Form from Function: A Vector Field Based Approach to the Analysis of
CT Images of the Vascular Tree
J.P. Williams and L.B. Wolff
Spatiotemporal Operators and Optic Flow
W.J. Niessen, J.S. Duncan, L.M.J. Florack, B.M. ter Haar Romeny, and
M.A. Viergever
Nonlinear Finite Element Methods for Nonrigid Motion Analysis
W-C. Huang, D.B. Goldgof, and L. Tsap
JUNE 19
8:30-10:30
SESSION 4: ILLUMINATION, REFLECTANCE, AND SHAPE
A Ray-Based Computational Model of Light Sources and Illumination
M.S. Langer and S.W. Zucker
An Illumination Planner for Convex and Concave Lambertian Polyhedral
Objects
F. Solomon and K. Ikeuchi
5+/-2 Eigenimages Suffice: An Empirical Investigation of
Low-Dimensional Lighting Models
R. Epstein, P.W. Hallinan, and A.L. Yuille
Principal Components Analysis and Neural Network Implementation of
Photometric Stereo
Y. Iwahori, R.J. Woodham, and A. Bagheri
10:30-10:45pm
BREAK
10:45-12noon
PANEL 2: REFLECTANCE, ILLUMINATION, COLOR, POLARIZATION, AND SHAPE
CHAIR: S. W. Lee (U. Michigan)
PANELISTS: D. Forsyth (UC Berkeley), G. Healey (UC Irvine), K. Ikeuchi (CMU),
S. Nayar (Columbia U), S. Shafer (CMU), L. Wolff (Johns Hopkins U), B. Woodham (UBC)
12noon-1:15pm
LUNCH
1:15-3:15pm
SESSION 5: SHAPE ANALYSIS
Shape Decomposition Based on Erosion Model
F. Kanehara, S. Satoh, and T. Hamada
Determining the Similarity of Deformable Shapes
R. Basri, L. Costa, D. Geiger, and D. Jacobs
Seeing Physics, or: Physics is for Prediction
M. Brand, P. Cooper, and L. Birnbaum
Physically-Based and Adaptive Preconditioners for Early Vision
S.H. Lai and B.C. Vemuri
3:15-3:30pm
BREAK
3:30-5:30pm
SESSION 6: COLOR, POLARIZATION, AND TEXTURE
Polarization Based Removal of Spurious Inter-Reflections in Active
Ranging
J. Clark, E. Trucco, and H-F. Cheung
Multi-Spectral Based Cell Segmentation and Analysis
G. Fernandez, M. Kunt, and J-P. Zryd
New Directions in Texture Modeling Using Random Fields with Random
Spatial Interaction
A. Speis and G. Healey
Reflectance Analysis Under Solar Illumination
Y. Sato and K. Ikeuchi
For accessing information on ICCV'95 and registration/accommodation
(PBMCV'95 included) do the following:
Login as anonymous as follows:
ftp ftp.ai.mit.edu
login anonymous
password your_login_id
cd pub/users/welg
get iccv_reg_new.ps.Z
quit
Make sure you are in binary mode within ftp.
Then do uncompress iccv_reg_new.ps.Z and print it.
------------------------------
End of VISION-LIST digest 14.23
************************