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SAMPL director Prof. Kim Boyer has been named a Jefferson Science Fellow at the US Department of State




Jefferson Science Fellows at the U.S. Department of State



About SAMPL

The Signal Analysis and Machine Perception Laboratory (SAMPL) was founded in 1986 by Prof. Kim L. Boyer to undertake research in the broad areas of computer vision and image analysis. While the specific topics under study at any given time may vary according to current sponsorship and faculty and student interests, SAMPL has a rich, productive history of research and publications. The following application areas have been, or are currently, foci of our program:

bulletAerial and satellite image understanding, including hyper- and multispectral imagery, for automated mapping, detection of human activity, and change detection using photometric features and textures, and perceptual organization
bulletRetinal boundary detection and nerve head tracking in Optical Coherence Tomography
bulletAutomated analysis of magnetic resonance imagery of the head and, more recently, the heart
bulletRange image and terrain elevation data segmentation and analysis based on surface curvatures
bullet3D object recognition using graph-theoretic approaches, appearance-based methods (both local and global features)
bulletPerceptual organization for surface and contour decomposition from curvature measures
bulletRange profile data analysis for target detection and classification in heavily occluded environments
bulletHead and face tracking for driver behavioral analysis
bulletHuman motion understanding, including gait analysis
bulletAutomated range image registration for efficient modelbuilding
bulletAutomated weld pool analysis for on-line quality control in robotic welding
bulletReal time fillet weld inspection from range data
bulletRobust methods in surface organization; pipeline corrosion detection

Within these applications, we have always endeavored to produce high-quality, rigorous, fundamental research results that find application across a broad swath of computer vision and image processing problem domains.

Sponsors

We are a leading research group, with a strong, respected presence in the international computer vision research community. We have placed our alumni in academic and industrial positions across the US and around the world. Our sponsors and collaborators over the years have included:

bulletNational Institutes of Health
bulletNational Aeronautics and Space Administration (both Stennis Space Center and the Center for the Commercial Development of Space)
bulletAir Force Research Laboratories
bulletNational Science Foundation
bulletDefense Advanced Research Projects Agency
bulletOffice of Research and Development (ORD)
bulletHonda Research and Development
bulletTexas Instruments
bulletIntergraph Corporation
bulletOhio Department of Transportation
bulletUS Department of Transportation
bulletBattelle Memorial Institute
bulletIBM
bulletAT &T Bell Laboratories
bulletEdison Welding Institute
bulletState of Ohio Dayton Area Graduate Studies Institute

SAMPL researchers were proud to receive the Siemens Best Paper Award at the 1993 IEEE Computer Society Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition (CVPR) in New York City. We maintain close working ties with our colleagues in the   Electrical and Computer Engineering  department at OSU, as well as those within the Computer
Science and Engineering
department.

Facilities

Owing in part to a recent National Science Foundation equipment grant, SAMPL is one of the best equipped academic laboratories for research in computer vision in the United States.

SAMPL is physically organized into two adjoining rooms. The main room encompasses approximately 770 square feet (73 m2) and includes seven high performance (Pentium 4 @ 1.7 GHz) image processing workstations (3 with 17" dual monitors and 4 with 21" monitors) running Windows 2000, one HP Visualize X Class workstation with HP fx10 graphics card, wireless stereo viewing glasses and 1.25 GB RAM, meeting and presentation area with Sharp Notevision computer projection system, stereo television and VCR, and an informal discussion area.

The second, or sensors, room encompasses 396 square feet (38 m2) and includes a Minolta Vivid high performance laser ranging system with computer controlled turntable and dedicated workstation, many digital cameras of various types, GL1 and ZR10 Canon digital camcorders with fire-wire connections, floor-to-ceiling gantry for the mounting of camera and lighting fixtures, controlled spot and flood lighting for the imaging bay,14 cpu Beowulf commodity supercomputer and a mix of
high-performance image processing workstations, multiple high-capacity network server appliances (nearly 1 terabyte of online storage), dual cpu compute server, Matrox 4-sight image acquisition and processing unit with hardware compression board installed, Point Grey Triclops color stereo imaging system with dedicated workstation, HP color and monochrome laser printers, galley, lab library, and equipment storage.