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VISION-LIST Digest Volume 16 Issue 14

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VISION LIST Digest
 · 6 Jan 2024

VISION-LIST Digest    Sun Jun 29 02:04:13 PDT 97     Volume 16 : Issue 14 

- ***** The Vision List host is VISLIST.COM *****
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and http://www.vislist.com/archives/current-vislist_digest
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- Vision List support courtesy of Autodesk and Directed Perception, Inc.

Today's Topics:

JOB: LG ERC, Video Processing / Computer Vision
JOB: CMU, Postdoctoral Position
JOB: UK Robotics, Development Engineer
CFP: IEEE Expert, Vision-Based Driving
CFP: Final CFP, Special Issue of CVIU
CFP: Workshop on Perceptual User Interfaces
CFP: IEEE Workshop on Visual Surveillance
CFP: Advances in Color Machine Vision
CFP: Machine Vision Applications in Industrial Inspection 1998
CFP: Joint ISPRS Commission III/IV Workshop
TR: 2 M.Sc. dissertations available (IN FRENCH)

----------------------------------------------------------------------

From: "N. Nandhakumar" <nandhu@virtulink.com>
Organization: LG Electronics Research Center of America, Inc
Subject: JOB: LG ERC, Video Processing / Computer Vision

LG Electronics Research Center of America, a newly formed subsidiary
of a major global corporation is searching for outstanding scientists
and researchers to develop leading edge technologies with an emphasis
on commercialization. This is an opportunity to be a part of a team of
founders in a startup atmosphere as we define and execute an
innovative research agenda. We will be developing capabilities for
networked consumer devices - comprising novel networking, hardware,
software, and video & image processing technologies.

The Image and Video Processing group is interested in researchers who
have made technical contributions in one or more of the following (or
related) areas:
- Video Indexing / Key Frame Detection
- Content based Video Retrieval
- Face Recognition
- Video Compression
- Data Communication

Experience in software/hardware system implementation is especially
desirable.

To apply, or for more information, please contact:

N. Nandhakumar,
Manager, Image & Video Processing
LG Electronics Research Center of America, Inc.
Princeton Jct, NJ, 08550
E-mail: nandhu@lgerca.com Corp Info: www.lgeus.com
Phone: 609-716-3506 Fax: 609-716-3503

------------------------------

From: jeffrey cohn <jeffcohn@vms.cis.pitt.edu>
Subject: JOB: CMU Postdoctoral Position

Postdoctoral Position in Computer Vision at the Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University. To join an interdisciplinary research
team with expertise in computer vision and human-observer based
methods of facial expression analysis. The team is developing an
automated system for measuring facial expression in digitized image
sequences. Goals include localizing facial components, increasing the
number of action units that are recognized, quantifying action unit
intensity, generalizing action unit estimation to a wider range of
image orientations and ambient lighting, and testing automated face
coding in end-user applications. The postdoc is expected to a play
formative role in this exciting project. Candidates should send a
curriculum vitae, statement of career interests, representative
publications, and three letters of recommendation to Dr. Takeo Kanade,
Robotics Institute, Smith Hall, Carnegie Mellon University, 5000
Forbes Avenue, Pittsburgh, PA 15213.

------------------------------

From: "Graham Dalton" <gad@robotics.co.uk>
Subject: JOB: UK Robotics, Development Engineer

If you are interested in the following job vacancy, please forward your cv.
Location: Manchester, UK
Vacancy: Due to the continued product development within our Vision
Systems Group, a vacancy has arisen for a masters/graduate level
development engineer.
Company: UK Robotics is a high technology subsidiary of a major UK plc.
The company has a portfolio of world class robotics products and
technologies.
Group:
The group, which has strong industrial and academic links, are
dedicated to developing vision based products. We specialise in 3-D
laser-based vision. We have a wide ranging experience in the practical
application of such systems in diverse applications.

Working in:
Software Design and development. Applied Research. Construction of 3-D CAD
models.

Coding Skills:
C++, C, UNIX

Relevant background Skills:
image analysis, mathematics

Salary:
18-23,000 pounds sterling


Graham Dalton, Vision Systems Team Leader
UK Robotics Ltd.,
Derwent House, Clarence Avenue,
Trafford Park, Manchester, M17 1QS UK
tel: +44(0)161 876 3207
fax: +44(0)161 876 3201
e-mail: graham.dalton@robotics.co.uk
URL:http://www.robotics.co.uk

------------------------------

From: Alberto Broggi <broggi@ce.unipr.it>
Subject: CFP: IEEE Expert, Vision-Based Driving

IEEE Expert Magazine

VISION-BASED DRIVING ASSISTANCE IN VEHICLES OF THE FUTURE
http://www.ce.unipr.it/expert

ALBERTO BROGGI, Guest Editor

Thanks to the increasing computational power of current computer systems
and to the reduced costs of image-acquisition devices, in the last few
years vision-based sensing of the surrounding environment has gained a
strategic importance not only in military applications, but also in the
automotive field. This special issue will address the problems of
autonomous vehicle driving, describe common techniques, and present the
state of the art. Suggested topics include
- Vision-based guidance of unmanned vehicles.
- Analysis of real-time constraints for vehicle driving.
- Vehicle navigation in unknown environments.
- Integration of specialized hardware on vehicles.
- Description of research prototypes.
- Legal aspects.
- Analysis of future trends.

Expert seeks two kinds of articles:
- TUTORIALS and SURVEYS introducing this field and reviewing the state
of the art or the state of the practice of work done in this area,
with the aim of comparing different solutions and techniques. Such
articles should be approximately 6,000 words (9-10 magazine pages),
with extensive references to widely available published works. One or
two such articles will likely be included.
- ARTICLES describing prototypes of autonomous vehicles developed
worldwide by universities, research centers, corporations, and
government institutions. These articles should describe both the
techniques and the results obtained, and the references should allow
the interested reader to follow up on both. Articles describing the
fusion of data coming from sensors other than vision are also welcome.
These articles should be from 5,500 to 6,000 words (8-9 magazine
pages), with no more than 12 references. A consistent and useful set
of definitions and examples can often help explain the underlying
mathematics. Such aids can be presented as sidebars in the published
article. Four or five such articles will likely be included.

All authors should submit six hard copies of their article by December
20, 1997, to the guest editor, Alberto Broggi. Authors intending to
submit tutorials or survey articles are encouraged to discuss this with
the guest editor or to send an extended abstract to him by October 1,
1997.

Guest Editor: Alberto BROGGI
Dipartimento di Ingegneria dell'Informazione
Universita` di Parma
I-43100 Parma
ITALY
Fax 39 (521) 90-5723
a.broggi@computer.org

Schedule:
Submission of manuscripts: December 20, 1997
Acceptance/rejection notification: April 12, 1998
Revised manuscripts due: June 7, 1998
Publication: September 1998

For more information, access http://www.ce.unipr.it/expert

IEEE Expert: Intelligent Systems and Their Applications publishes
technically substantive articles that are referenced extensively in the
literature and read by 8,000-9,000 people worldwide. Expert is a magazine
of applied AI - a bridge between the research community and the user
community. Its readers want to learn about the tools, techniques,
concepts, and systems that have potential for real-world applications.
Conceptual or theoretical papers are welcome, provided they clarify and
present items of importance to applications. Clear, not overly formal,
writing is essential.

All articles will be carefully peer reviewed. Authors whose articles are
accepted on technical grounds will work with the magazine's staff editors
to arrive at a final article that is clear, straightforward, and valuable
to the user community.

Full publication guidelines are available at
http://computer.org/pubs/expert/edguide.htm, or from the managing editor
at dprice@computer.org.

------------------------------

From: Boon-Lock Yeo <yeo@watson.ibm.com>
Subject: CFP: Special Issue of CVIU


COMPUTER VISION AND IMAGE UNDERSTANDING

SPECIAL ISSUE ON
COMPUTER VISION APPLICATIONS FOR NETWORK-CENTRIC COMPUTING

Publication date August 1998.
Paper submission date August 1, 1997.

Large amounts of data are literally at our fingertips. These data are
heterogeneous in nature and distributed. That is, the data consist of
text, image, audio, video, graphics, and raw data. Much of these data
reside in networks of distributed computers and servers.

As the last two decades have been marked by tremendous developments in
database and network technology, we believe that the next two decades
will bring us equally pathbreaking developments in digital library
technology. Traditional databases are rather structured and provide
limited means of retrieving data through parametric searches. Digital
libraries, on the other hand, are heterogeneous, distributed networked
databases along with intelligent means for finding/interpreting the
data and perhaps utilizing distributed computing. Digital libraries
are an important enabling technology for the next trend in computing
-- Network-Centric Computing (NCC).

Many NCC applications are multimedia, involving visual data that make
huge demands on compute power, storage, and bandwidth. These are
becoming cheaper and more readily available, yet the rate at which the
amount of data is increasing is growing faster. Therefore intelligent
data processing and management remain important research issues where
the field of computer vision and pattern recognition can make many
contributions.

We solicit papers on the following topics:
o visual data mining
o image/video search (content/structure)
o content-based/query-based compression
o CAD compression
o viewing 3-D, telepresence
o image/video security, authentication and copyright
o automatic categorization of image/video types (e.g., internet
search, intelligent search agent); visual sieve
o video visualization
o automatic generation of visual summary (for transmission over a
low-bandwidth network; fast browsing of queried results)
o integration/fusion of other media, e.g., speech, audio, text, etc.
o intelligent user interfaces

Send four copies of your manuscript (marked "NCC Special Issue") by
August 1, 1997 to:
Computer Vision and Image Understanding
Editorial Office
525 B Street, Suite 1900
San Diego, CA 92101-4495

GUEST EDITORS

Ruud M. Bolle and Boon-Lock Yeo
bolle@watson.ibm.com yeo@watson.ibm.com
IBM Thomas J. Watson Research Center
PO Box 704
Yorktown Heights, NY 10598

More information can be found at web site:
http://www.ee.princeton.edu/~yeo/cviu.html

------------------------------

From: Matthew Turk <mturk@MICROSOFT.com>
Subject: CFP: Workshop on Perceptual User Interfaces

(Reminder: Submission deadline is July 11)

Call For Participation

Workshop on Perceptual User Interfaces
October 20-21, 1997
The Banff Rocky Mountain Resort, Banff, Alberta, Canada
http://www.research.microsoft.com/PUIWorkshop/

Researchers in various areas of computer science are developing
technologies to add perceptual capabilities such as speech and vision to
the human-computer interface. Such "perceptual user interfaces" may be
the next major paradigm in human-computer interaction.

The purpose of this workshop is to bring together researchers from
academia and industry pursuing research in vision, speech, user
interfaces, machine learning, and user modeling, with common interests
in making human-computer interaction more natural and compelling by
integrating perceptual input into the user interface. The workshop will
be an ideal opportunity to exchange ideas, share research results and
learn about the various issues and technologies involved in creating the
next generation of user interfaces.

The two-day workshop will be structured to facilitate a high degree of
interaction. There will be oral and poster presentations of current
research, invited tutorials, panel discussions, and open discussion
time. The program committee will accept presentations based on extended
abstracts, which will be published in the workshop proceedings. The
format is intended to emphasize the interdisciplinary nature of
perceptual user interfaces, and to expose the participants to the main
issues and challenges in each of the related research areas. The
workshop will take place following UIST '97 (User Interface Software and
Technology) - workshop participants are encouraged to come early to
attend UIST '97 as well.

Authors should submit extended abstracts describing original research in
areas related to perceptual user interfaces. Appropriate topics include
but are not limited to:
- speech and sound recognition
- visual tracking of people
- modeling and recognizing gestures
- vision and speech integration
- learning about the user
- user modeling
- integrating multiple sources of information
- systems issues associated with perceptual user interfaces

Abstract submissions should be approximately two pages in length.
Authors should submit via e-mail (ASCII text, Postscript, Word .doc
file, or HTML pointer) to pui97@microsoft.com. All submissions are to
include a cover letter indicating the primary author's name,
affiliation, address, phone number and e-mail address. Submissions must
be received no later than Friday July 11, 1997. Authors will be notified
of acceptance by Friday August 8, 1997.

Workshop Co-Chairs
Matthew Turk, Microsoft Research, USA
Yoichi Takebayashi, Toshiba R&D Center, Japan

Program Committee
Christian Benoit, ICP-CNRS, France
Phil Cohen, Oregon Graduate Institute, USA
Joelle Coutaz, CLIPS-IMAG, France
Jim Crowley, INPG, France
Eric Horvitz, Microsoft Research, USA
Kenji Mase, ATR, Japan
Sharon Oviatt, Oregon Graduate Institute, USA
Alex Pentland, MIT Media Lab, USA
George Robertson, Microsoft Research, USA
Chris Schmandt, MIT Media Lab, USA
Steven Shafer, Microsoft Research, USA
Alex Waibel, CMU, USA

Key Dates
July 11, 1997 - Abstracts due
August 8, 1997 - Notification of acceptance
August 29, 1997 - Registration deadline
October 14-17, 1997 - UIST'97 conference
October 20-21, 1997 - Workshop dates

Location
The Banff Rocky Mountain Resort in Banff is nestled at the base of
picturesque Rundle and Cascade Mountains in the Canadian Rockies, 4 km
from downtown Banff. Amenities include a health club, indoor pool,
steam room and sauna, squash and tennis courts, indoor and outdoor hot
tubs, and chalet-style guest rooms with wood burning fireplaces. A
shuttle service is provided to and from downtown Banff. The hotel rate
for the workshop is $95 (Canadian) (approximately US$68). Banff is
located 90 miles (145 kilometers) west of Calgary International Airport,
about a 1 1/2 hour drive. Coach service to Banff and car rentals are
available at the Calgary airport.

For updated information concerning the workshop, registration, the Banff
area, and the UIST '97 conference, visit the web site
http://www.research.microsoft.com/PUIWorkshop/. For e-mail queries,
send mail to pui97@microsoft.com.

------------------------------

From: T.Tan@reading.ac.uk (Tieniu Tan)
Subject: CFP: IEEE Workshop on Visual Surveillance

IEEE Workshop on Visual Surveillance - Call for Papers

January 2, 1998
Tata Institute for Fundamental Research, Bombay, India
(In conjunction with ICCV'98)

Visual Surveillance is a major application of computer vision and is
of great societal importance. By analyzing information from one or
more cameras it is possible to monitor and hence control activities in
large, complex and spatially distributed regions such as city centres,
airports, road and rail networks, and even individual buildings.
Visual surveillance involves traditional computer vision research
areas such as image analysis, object recognition and data fusion as
well as newer areas such as system wide autocalibration, AI based
scene analysis and learning.

A one day workshop on visual surveillance will be held on January 2
1998, just before ICCV'98. Papers are invited on any theoretical or
practical aspects of visual surveillance. Typical topics are
o Motion segmentation and analysis o Rigid and non-rigid object tracking
o Object detection and recognition o Spatial and temporal reasoning
o Behaviour modelling and analysis o Semantics recovery
o Action understanding o Multi-camera data fusion
o Context recovery and representation o System training and learning

All papers will be reviewed by the programme committee. Accepted
papers will be presented at the workshop and also included in the
proceedings to be published by the IEEE. Fuller versions of the best
papers will be considered for publication in a special issue of the
International Journal of Computer Vision.

Papers should be at most 8 pages, single spaced and with 3-4 keywords.
Please send 3 copies to Dr Steve Maybank at the address given below,
to arrive by August 15, 1997. Authors should include an email address
where possible.

For further information please contact Steve Maybank or Tieniu Tan.

Co-Chairs
Stephen J. Maybank Tieniu Tan
S.J.Maybank@reading.ac.uk T.Tan@reading.ac.uk
Department of Computer Science
The University of Reading
Whiteknights, PO Box 225
Reading, Berkshire, RG6 6AY, UK

Programme Committee
H. Buxton (Sussex, UK) J. Malik (UC Berkeley, USA)
J. Crowley (Grenoble, France) S.J. Maybank (Reading, UK)
E. Hancock (York, UK) H.-H. Nagel (Karlsruhe, Germany)
R. Hartley (GE, USA) A. Pentland (MIT, USA)
D. Hogg (Leeds, UK) G. Sandini (Genoa, Italy)
T. Kanade (CMU, USA) Y. Shirai (Osaka, Japan)
J. Kittler (Surrey, UK) T.N. Tan (Reading, UK)
S.D. Ma (CAS, China) S. Tsuji (Wakayama, Japan)


IMPORTANT DATES:
Full paper due: 15 AUGUST 1997
Notification: 18 SEPTEMBER 1997
Camera ready copy: 15 OCTOBER 1997
Workshop: 2 JANUARY 1998

------------------------------

From: Shashi Buluswar <buluswar@klingon.cs.umass.edu>
Subject: CFP: Advances in Color Machine Vision

Advances in Color Machine Vision
Special session in conjunction with

3rd Asian Conference on Computer Vision
January 8-11, 1998
Hong Kong

ORGANIZERS:
Shashi Buluswar, University of Massachsetts
Sang Wook Lee, University of Michigan

SESSION DESCRIPTION:

For long, color machine vision research has concentrated on simple,
controlled imagery and/or theoretical issues; consequently, the
applications of color-based methods have been largely constrained.
The advent of new technologies such as mobile and outdoor robotics,
the world-wide web, and face recognition systems adds a whole new
dimension to color-based vision research, namely, application in
time-dependent, robust, practical systems. We invite researchers
involved in color research in machine vision, biological vision,
engineering and psychology to contribute ideas to developing solutions
to problems in real-world color vision. Research that is being used
in (or is of potential use in) realistic applications is of particular
interest. Suggested topics include (but are not restricted to):
- Applications of color machine vision
- Color constancy
- Color-based segmentation
- Indexing/ color-based search
- Color camera design
- Physics-based models

INSTRUCTIONS FOR SUBMISSION:
Please send three copies of the paper, limited to ten single-spaced pages,
including the abstract, figures and references, to:
Shashi Buluswar
General Motors Research
Mail Code: 480-106-390
30500 Mound Rd
Warren, MI 48090-9055 U.S.A.
e-mail: buluswar@cs.umass.edu

Please also include a separate title page with the names and addresses
(inluding e-mail) of authors.

IMPORTANT DATES:
Paper submission: August 15, '97
Notification of acceptance: September 15, '97
Camera-ready copy: October 15, '97

------------------------------

From: Ravi Rao <rao@watson.ibm.com>
Subject: CFP: Machine Vision Applications in Industrial Inspection 1998

Machine Vision Applications in Industrial Inspection 1998

Conference Date: Jan 26-30, 1998
Location: San Jose, California

Conference Chairs:
A. Ravishankar Rao, IBM Thomas J. Watson Research Ctr.;
Ning Chang, KLA Instruments Corp.

Program Committee:
Joon Han POSTECH, Pohang, Korea
John Jordan Tencor Instruments
Kenneth Tobin Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Tennessee

Automated machine vision systems are in wide use in industrial
applications for guidance and inspection. Almost all semiconductor
and electronic manufacturing equipment include machine vision systems
to perform essential tasks such as alignment and positioning.
Furthermore, there are numerous innovative methods of adding machine
vision systems to manufacturing processes to improve productivity,
quality, and compliance with product standards, and thus provide a
competitive advantage. Improvements in machine vision hardware,
algorithms, and software expand the range of industrial processes to
which this technology can be successfully applied.

This conference brings together practitioners and researchers in
machine vision to share recent developments in computer vision
architectures, hardware, algorithms, and software for industrial
inspection tasks. Papers emphasizing the integration of machine
vision systems into the manufacturing infrastructure are especially
welcome.

Papers are solicited but not limited to the following areas:
* new or improved algorithms for industrial inspection
* novel hardware designs for machine vision systems
* robot vision and tracking
* verification and identification
* performance evaluation of algorithms
* use of 3D or color imaging techniques
* software systems for flexible automatic inspection
* applications of machine vision in microelectronics manufacturing, web
and paper products, glass and steel inspection, food and agriculture,
and pharmaceuticals.
* machine learning/feature analysis techniques, e.g. automatic defect
classification
* use of machine vision information for process control/diagnosis/
trend analysis/preventive maintenance
* case studies of the impact of machine vision in manufacturing

All submissions will be peer reviewed. Please note that abstracts must
be at least 500 words in length in order to receive full
consideration.

Deadline for submssions: 30 June, 1997

Please visit the SPIE Web site, http://www.spie.org
Click on Photonics West Call for Papers
Electronic Imaging, EI 98
Submissions
and fill out the online submission form for your abstracts. In
addition, if you need to send a fax, you may do so at number
1-360-647-1445. Please indicate the conference, Electronic Imaging,
Machine Vision and Applications.

------------------------------

From: Carsten Steger <stegerc@informatik.tu-muenchen.de>
Subject: CFP: Joint ISPRS Commission III/IV Workshop

Second Announcement and Call for Participation

Joint ISPRS Commission III/IV Workshop, 17-19 September 1997, Stuttgart


3D Reconstruction and Modelling of Topographic Objects
- Integration of multiple information sources and image understanding -


All relevant information, including general information, the
preliminary program and the registration forms can be found at the
Workshop Web site: http://www.technion.ac.il/people/krupnik/workshop.html


ORGANISING ISPRS WORKING GROUPS:
WG III/4 - Image Understanding/Object Recognition
WG IV/2 - Digital Terrain Models, Orthoimages and 3D GIS
Intercommission WG IV/III.2 - Integration of Image Analysis and GIS

COOPERATING ORGANISATIONS:
International Society for Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing (ISPRS)
German Society for Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing (DGPF)
Institute of Photogrammetry, University Stuttgart


INVITATION

The workshop wants to bring together specialists in digital
photogrammetry, image analysis, remote sensing and GIS to discuss the
current state of (semi-)automatic procedures for acquiring object
information from images and maps. It will deal mainly with topographic
objects, especially in urban regions, and will focus on 3D approaches.
The goal is to find common object models and analysis strategies with
emphasis on the integration of multiple information and knowledge
sources. The topics will refer to basic research or advanced
applications of digital photogrammetry and computer vision for
geo-database generation and update.

During the three days of the workshop, researchers and practitioners
from digital photogrammetry, image analysis, remote sensing, GIS and
related fields will have the opportunity to put in perspective the
interrelationships of all involved disciplines, thus maximizing mutual
gains. You are cordially invited to participate and contribute to its
success.


DETAILED INFORMATION

If you are interested in participating in the workshop, please take a
look at the WWW page:

http://wwwradig.informatik.tu-muenchen.de/ISPRS/WG-III4-IV2-Workshop.html

It contains the technical programme and registration forms for the
workshop, as well as travel directions to and within Stuttgart.


Maxim Fradkin
Department of Civil Engineering
Technion - Israel Institute of Technology
Haifa, 32000 Israel
Ph. +972-4-8292660
Fax +972-4-8234757
E-mail: fradkin@tx.technion.ac.il
Homepage: http://www.technion.ac.il/people/fradkin

------------------------------

From: Christian.Ronse@dpt-info.u-strasbg.fr (Christian Ronse in Strasbourg)
Subject: TR: 2 M.Sc. dissertations available (IN FRENCH)

The following two M.Sc. dissertations ("M\'emoires de D.E.A." IN
FRENCH!) are available by ftp, http, or in print:


1) "Segmentation d'images par coop\'eration contours-r\'egions"
by
Vincent AGNUS

SUMMARY:
This dissertation presents an experimental study of the approach to
segmentation based on a combination of contour and region information.
First two edge detectors are implemented and compared: Canny's
Gaussian gradient, and Freeman's and Adelson's steerable filters; for
both of them Canny's hysteresis technique is applied to the resulting
edge. Then regions are segmented by applying the Meyer-1 watershed
algorithm to the gradient image, with markers delimitated by a closure
of contours. Here the contours are closed by applying to the edge a
directional dilation by a rectangle whose orientation is tangential to
the edge; a variant is given where this dilation is applied only to
edge extremities, at other locations the edge is only thickened in
order to make it 4-connected. In order to reduce over-segmentation,
markers smaller than a threshold are removed. Another approach is
tested, where markers are minima of the negative distance transform of
the edge map.


2) "D\'etection et mod\'elisation de traits locaux bidirectionnels
dans les images a niveaux de gris"
by
Franck NOEL

SUMMARY:
This dissertation starts with a survey of the existing litterature on
the detection of multi-directional image features, such as corners and
junctions. Then it makes a practical study of the implementation of
two methods: first Robbin's 2D energy (and some unsuccessful
variants...), next Noble's morphological approach. There is an
extensive bibliography.


HOW TO GET THEM:

ELECTRONICALLY:
Each report consists of a gzip-ed Postcript file; they are:
DEA_97_Agnus.ps.gz (1429478 bytes)
DEA_97_Noel.ps.gz (1530585 bytes)
You can fetch them either by anonymous ftp or by http.

anonymous ftp on: dpt-info.u-strasbg.fr
go to directory: /pub/recherche/Vision/
get file: DEA_97_Agnus.ps.gz
DEA_97_Noel.ps.gz

http://gr6.u-strasbg.fr/~ronse/Reports/
You get inside an hypertext index, and you select the appropriate file
(DEA_97_Agnus.ps.gz or DEA_97_Noel.ps.gz) by clicking on the link.

PRINTED ON PAPER:
Send me a request by e-mail, with your complete postal address
(including zip code and country), and be VERY patient, because
of printing and postage delays.


P.S.: Don't congratulate me on my "new degree", the authors are my
students, I am only the Prof...

Christian Ronse LSIIT - URA CNRS 1871
Universite Louis Pasteur, UFR de Mathematique et Informatique
7 rue Rene Descartes, F-67000 Strasbourg
e-mail: ronse@gr6.u-strasbg.fr Tel. +33-3-88.41.66.38
http://gr6.u-strasbg.fr/~ronse/ Fax. +33-3-88.60.26.54

------------------------------

End of VISION-LIST digest 16.14
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