Archive for the ‘ORALS’ Category

ORALS

Thursday, June 4th, 2009

Guidelines for ORAL PRESENTATIONS

Congratulations on having your paper’s selection for an ORAL presentation at CVPR 2009 in Miami, FL. As you well know, getting an ORAL presentation is a special privilege as you will be presenting to a room full of anywhere from 500-1000 people. It is essential that you take this presentation seriously and prepare your presentation to highlight the novel contribution of your research to the fullest. There are two primary aspects of this ORAL presentation. (1) Appropriate presentation materials to showcase your work and (2) Preparation, and appropriate (and repeated) practice of your presentation , to get you ready for a professional presentation of you research to a large crowd of your peers.  Here we provide some guidelines to help you do both of these.  Please pay attentions to these guidelines and recommendations.

1. Preparing Slides.

A key element of your CVPR 2009 presentation is your electronic slide preparation. The audience will base its evaluation of you and your subject matter partly on the appearance of your images. An attractive, legible, and organized presentation will reflect positively on the content, and therefore on you. Please review these basic guidelines to ensure that your CVPR 2009 presentation is the best it can possibly be:

A. Timing

Each ORAL presentation at CVPR is allocated 20 minutes. 15-16 minutes for the presentation and the rest for question / answers from the audience moderated by the session chair. Plan your talk and the number of slides to allow for a relaxed pace. A usual recommendation is of a slide per minute. If you have a lot more than that (say 30!), you will be rushing it for sure. Practice your talk before the conference. Time yourself. Think of what you would change if the presentation had to be shortened or lengthened. Force yourself to slow down a little. A rushed presentation will create more stress for you and won’t be compelling. Practice, practice, practice.  You will notice that after a few practices you will be better paced and more comfortable with the presentation.

B. Legibility (Text/Fonts/Style)

The ORAL sessions rooms at CVPR 2009 are large and can accommodate up-to 900+ people in conference/classroom style seating. Your presentation must be legible from the back row, with decent lighting. If you can stand two meters away from your computer’s monitor and easily read your slides, your text is large enough. To achieve this, limit each slide to eight lines of text or less and limit each line of text to 30 characters or less. Use a bold typeface, no smaller than 28 points, with generous line spacing. Also, remember that slides with material (text/figures) all the way to the bottom of the slide are hard to read from the back rows. Leave the bottom inch of the slide content free.

Use key words, so that your slides will be quick and easy to read. You want the audience to hear your presentation, while the slides accentuate the points to remember. Use standard fonts. That way your presentation will be truly portable. Incorporate only the essential parts of a diagram and simplify whenever possible. While it is tempting to include detail for the sake of accuracy, too much will make the slide difficult to read and become a distraction. Break up complex diagrams into sections if you can, so that each section can be made larger and therefore more legible. If you use plots, make sure axis are marked and also legible.

C. Capitalization

Avoid the use of ALL CAPITAL letters. Words written in ALL CAPS are harder to read and take up more space on the screen. Use bold face and italics for emphasis, or use a bright color such as yellow text when normal body text is white. Underlined text is not recommended as it is hard to see.

D. Color and Contrast

Make good use of color and contrast. Dark backgrounds tend to be easier to view, especially with light text and graphics. These days with brighter projectors, light background slides work fine too, If you use a light background, use black or very dark text and graphics. Do not use yellow of lighter colors for text.

Maintain consistency throughout your slides. Using the same background color, text size, text color, and uniform fonts throughout all the slides makes it easier for the audience to follow the flow of your ideas.

E. Templates

Following are templates in Powerpoint (ppt, pptx, pot, potx) and in Keynote (key, kth).  Feel free to use and modify.

Guidelines about Speaking/Presenting

Being able to stand in front of an audience an convey your message, and in this case, your research methodology, results and findings is no trivial matter. We expect all of you to take this task seriously and come prepared for a high-quality oral presentation, representative of your research, that resulted in an ORAL presentation at CVPR. Following are a few sites we have gathered to help you understand, appreciate, and more importantly learn from, to aid you in giving the best ORAL presentation possible.

Again, above are simply recommendation and guidelines. We have no doubt that each and every presenter at CVPR will do their best to give an excellent presentation. Hopefully, the above guidelines will help you with that.  At the risk of repeating ourselves, we encourage all presenters to prepare good materials, with great visual quality and prepare/practice your talk in front of a live audience.
Thanks
Chairs, CVPR 2009.

Physics and Optimization

Friday, May 1st, 2009

Wednesday, June 24

Time: 5:10—6:30
Location: Sparkle West
Session Chair: D. Cremers (U Bonn)

  • (De)Focusing on Global Light Transport for Active Scene Recovery (Mohit Gupta (Carnegie Mellon University), Yuandong Tian (Carnegie Mellon University), Srinivasa Narasimhan (Carnegie Mellon University), Li Zhang (University of Wisconsin-Madison))
  • A Projective Framework for Radiometric Image Analysis (Ping Tan (National University of Singapore), Todd Zickler (Harvard University))
  • Beyond Pairwise Energies: Efficient Optimization for Higher-order MRFs (Nikos Komodakis (University of Crete), Nikos Paragios (Ecole Centrale de Paris/INRIA Saclay, Ile-de-France))
  • Higher-Order Clique Reduction in Binary Graph Cut (Hiroshi Ishikawa (Nagoya City University))

Tracking and Learning

Friday, May 1st, 2009

Wednesday, June 24

Time: 5:10—6:30
Location: Sparkle East
Session Chair: F. Porikli (MERL)

  • SURFTrac: Efficient Tracking and Continuous Object Recognition using Local Feature Descriptors (Duy-Nguyen Ta (Georgia Institute of Technology), Wei-Chao Chen (Nokia Research Center), Natasha Gelfand (Nokia Research Center), Kari Pulli (Nokia Research Center))
  • Real Time Learning of Accurate Patch Rectification (Stefan Hinterstoisser (TU Munich), Oliver Kutter (TU Munich), Nassir Navab (TU Munich), Pascal Fua (EPFL), Vincent Lepetit (EPFL)) 
  • Learning to Associate: HybridBoosted Multi-Target Tracker for Crowded Scene (Yuan Li (University of Southern California), Chang Huang (University of Southern California), Ram Nevatia (University of Southern California))
  • Learning sign language by watching TV (using weakly aligned subtitles) (Patrick Buehler (University of Oxford), Mark Everingham (University of Leeds), Andrew Zisserman (University of Oxford)) 

Video Analysis

Friday, May 1st, 2009

Wednesday, June 24

Time: 9:00—10:20
Location: Sparkle East
Session Chair: A. Hoogs (Kitware)

  • Multi-Camera Activity Correlation Analysis (Chen Change Loy (Queen Mary, University of London), Tao Xiang (Queen Mary, University of London), Shaogang Gong (Queen Mary, University of London))

  • Recognizing Realistic Actions from Videos Òin the WildÓ (Jingen Liu (University of Central Florida), Jiebo Luo (Kodak Research Labs), Mubarak Shah (University of Central Florida))

  • Hierarchical Spatio-Temporal Context Modeling for Action Recognition (Ju Sun (National University of Singapore), Xiao Wu (Chinese Academy of Sciences), Shuicheng Yan (National University of Singapore), Loong Fah Cheong (National University of Singapore), Tat-Seng Chua (National University of Singapore), Jintao Li (Chinese Academy of Sciences))
  • Understanding Videos, Constructing Plots - Learning a Visually Grounded Storyline Model from Annotated Videos (Abhinav Gupta (University of Maryland), Praveen Srinivasan (University of Pennsylvania), Jianbo Shi (University of Pennsylvania), Larry Davis (University of Maryland))

Paper Awards Session

Friday, May 1st, 2009

Tuesday, June 23

Time: 5:00-6:35

Location: Sparkle East

Session Chair: Michael Black

Awards Ceremony will be held after the Paper Presentations.

Best Paper:

  • Single Image Haze Removal Using Dark Channel Prior (Kaiming He (The Chinese University of Hong Kong), Jian Sun (Microsoft Research Asia), Xiaoou Tang (The Chinese University of Hong Kong))

Best Paper - Honorable Mention:

  • Understanding and evaluating blind deconvolution algorithms (Anat Levin (MIT & Weizmann Institute), Yair Weiss (Hebrew University of Jerusalem), Fredo Durand (MIT), Bill Freeman (MIT and Adobe))

Best Student Paper:

  • Nonparametric Scene Parsing: Label Transfer via Dense Scene Alignment (Ce Liu (MIT), Jenny Yuen (MIT), Antonio Torralba (MIT))

Best Student Paper - Honorable Mention:

  • A Tensor-Based Algorithm for High-Order Graph Matching (Olivier Duchenne (Ecole Normale Superieure), Francis Bach (INRIA - ENS), In So Kweon (KAIST), Jean Ponce (Ecole Normale Superieure)).

Longuet-Higgins Award

Longuet-Higgins Prize for Fundamental Contributions in Computer Vision is will be awarded at CVPR 2009 for papers that have “withstood the test of time.” Named after H. Christopher Longuet-Higgins, this award aims to recognize papers from CVPR meeting of 10 years back (ie. CVPR 1999) that have had a fundamental impact on the field of Computer Vision. More specifically, “The contribution of Longuet-Higgins to computer vision and pattern recognition was a series of sudden and pinpoint advances resulting from extended scholarship rather than an accretion of archived output.  Thus the Longuet-Higgins prize rewards an individual advance, represented by a single conference paper—underlining the special role of conference publications as the harbingers of innovation in this discipline.” This award was established in 2005.

At CVPR 2009, two papers from CVPR 1999 will be awarded the Longuet-Higgins Prize for Fundamental Contributions in Computer Vision:

  • Jinggang Huang, David Mumford, “Statistics of Natural Images and Models,” cvpr, vol. 1, pp.1541, 1999 IEEE Computer Society Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition (CVPR’99) - Volume 1, 1999
  • Chris Stauffer, W.E.L. Grimson, “Adaptive Background Mixture Models for Real-Time Tracking,” cvpr, vol. 2, pp.2246, 1999 IEEE Computer Society Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition (CVPR’99) - Volume 2, 1999

 The prize is selected by a small committee, drawn from across the field by the conference chairs, and as far as possible excluding those who were authors of papers in the source conference. Here is a list of previous award winners.

Best Demos

  • “Retrographic sensing for the measurement of surface texture and shape”, Micah K. Johnson, Edward H. Adelson
  • “Robust feature matching in 2.3 µs”, Simon Taylor, Edward Rosten, Tom Drummond

Outstanding Reviewer Awards:

We are pleased to award the following fifteen researchers as “Outstanding Reviewers for CVPR 2009″. These reviewers were selected from over 700 reviewers for their hard work in providing detailed reviews for the papers assigned to them. These top ranked 15 reviewers were identified by one or more of the CVPR Area Chairs, who found their reviews of high quality. Review load was also accounted for in this decision (reviewers with low review loads were discounted). We identified these reviewers separately depending on if they were senior students or senior researchers.

Graduate Students:

  • Liu, Ce (MIT)
  • Mateus, Diana (TUM)
  • Schoenemann, Thomas (U Bonn)
  • Tai, Yu-Wing (NU Singapore)
  • Wojek, Christian (TU Darmstadt)

Researcher/Faculty:

  • Everingham, Mark (Leeds)
  • Laptev, Ivan (INRIA)
  • Levoy, Marc (Stanford)
  • Leibe, Bastian (Aachen)
  • Pajdla, Tomas (Czech TU)
  • Saund, Eric (Xerox)
  • Schlesinger, Dmitrij (TU Dresden)
  • Siddiqi, Kaleem (McGill)
  • Torresani, Lorenzo (Dartmouth)
  • Verbeek, Jakob (INRIA)

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