Takeo Kanade

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Takeo Kanade
Born (1945-10-24) October 24, 1945 (age 78)
NationalityJapanese
Alma materKyoto University
Known forLucas–Kanade method Tomasi-Kanade method Face Detection Virtualized Reality
Scientific career
FieldsComputer vision
Robotics
InstitutionsCarnegie Mellon University
Kyoto University
Academic advisorsMakoto Nagao

Takeo Kanade (金出 武雄, Kanade Takeo, born October 24, 1945 in Hyōgo) is a Japanese computer scientist and one of the world's foremost researchers in computer vision. He is U.A. and Helen Whitaker Professor at Carnegie Mellon University. He has approximately 300 peer-reviewed academic publications and holds around 20 patents.[1]

Honors and achievements

  • In 1999 he was inducted as a Fellow of the Association for Computing Machinery.
  • In 2008 Kanade received the Bower Award and Prize for Achievement in Science from The Franklin Institute in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.[2]
  • A special event called TK60: Celebrating Takeo Kanade's vision was held to commemorate his 60th birthday.[3] This event was attended by prominent computer vision researchers.
  • Elected member of National Academy of Engineering, the American Academy of Arts and Sciences
  • Elected member of American Association of Artificial Intelligence, Robotics Society of Japan, and Institute of Electronics and Communication Engineers of Japan
  • Marr Prize, 1990 for the paper Shape from Interreflections which he co-authored with Shree K. Nayar and Katsushi Ikeuchi[4]
  • Longuet-Higgins Prize for lasting contribution in computer vision at
    • CVPR 2006 for the paper "Neural Network-Based Face Detection"[5] coauthored with H. Rowley and S. Baluja[6]
    • CVPR 2008[7] for the paper "Probabilistic modeling of local appearance and spatial relationships for object recognition"[8] coauthored with H Schneiderman
  • The other awards he has received include the C&C Award, the Joseph Engelberger Award, FIT Funai Accomplishment Award, the Allen Newell Research Excellence Award, and the JARA Award.
  • He has served for many government, industrial, and university advisory boards, including the Aeronautics and Space Engineering Board (ASEB) of the National Research Council, NASA's Advanced Technology Advisory Committee, PITAC Panel for Transforming Healthcare Panel, and the Advisory Board of Canadian Institute for Advanced Research.[9]

Notable works

External links

References

  1. ^ Takeo Kanade's personal website
  2. ^ http://www.fi.edu/franklinawards/08/laureate_bowers-kanade.html
  3. ^ http://www.ri.cmu.edu/events/tk60/
  4. ^ http://tab.computer.org/pamitc/conference/best-paper-awards.html
  5. ^ a b Henry Rowley; Shumeet Baluja; Takeo Kanade (June 1996). "Neural Network-Based Face Detection". Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition '96.
  6. ^ graphics.stanford.edu/~vaibhav/talks/cvpr06.ppt
  7. ^ http://vision.eecs.ucf.edu/
  8. ^ Henry Schneiderman; Takeo Kanade (July 1998). "Probabilistic Modeling of Local Appearance and Spatial Relationships for Object Recognition". Proceedings of the IEEE Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition (CVPR '98): 45–51.
  9. ^ http://www.ri.cmu.edu/events/tk60/bio.html
  10. ^ An Implementation of the Kanade–Lucas–Tomasi Feature Tracker
  11. ^ Carlo Tomasi; Takeo Kanade (November 1992). "Shape and motion from image streams under orthography: a factorization method". International Journal of Computer Vision. 9 (2): 137–154. doi:10.1007/BF00129684.
  12. ^ Takeo Kanade; Peter Rander; P J Narayanan (January 1997). "Virtualized Reality: Constructing Virtual Worlds from Real Scenes". IEEE Multimedia, Immersive Telepresence. 4 (1): 34–47. doi:10.1109/93.580394.
  13. ^ Takeo Kanade; Atsushi Yoshida; Kazuo Oda; Hiroshi Kano; Masaya Tanaka (1996). "A Stereo Machine for Video-rate Dense Depth Mapping and its New Applications". Ieee Cvpr.
  14. ^ Vladimir Brajovic; Takeo Kanade (August 1998). "Computational Sensor for Visual Tracking with Attention". IEEE Journal of Solid State Circuits. 33 (8): "1199–1207. doi:10.1109/4.705358.
  15. ^ Takeo Kanade (June 1980). "A Theory of Origami World". Artificial Intelligence. 13: 279–311. doi:10.1016/0004-3702(80)90004-1.

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