Call for participation for Workshop on Human and Computer Models of Video Understanding
Workshop on 15 May 2024, University of Surrey.
Dear Colleagues,
We invite participants to a workshop on "Human and Computer Models of Video
Understanding". We aim to bring together human and computer vision scientists to
share the latest knowledge and collaborate.
Participants can submit a 500 word (approx) abstract describing the work they would like
to present and their preference for an oral or poster presentation. Given time
constraints, accommodating all desired oral presentations might not be possible, so we
will review abstract submissions and assign some to oral presentation slots and some to
posters.
Please visit the workshop's website to submit an abstract and/or register:
https://www.ias.surrey.ac.uk/event/human-and-computer-models-of-video-under…
It is free to attend but there will be an optional evening dinner at an additional cost
(details and link for payment to be sent nearer the date).
Key Dates:
Abstract submission deadline: 29 March
Notification: 5 April
Workshop date: 15 May 2024, University of Surrey.
Invited Speakers:
Professor Shaogang Gong, Queen Mary University of London, Queen Mary Computer Vision
Laboratory
Professor Frank Pollick, University of Glasgow, School of Psychology and Neuroscience
Call for Research Contributions
We invite participants for a multi-disciplinary workshop on "Human and Computer
Models of Video Understanding". The core research question we are concerned with is:
How does the human brain understand people's activities in a video much better than
existing computer systems? We invite participants from the science of human vision
(psychology or brain sciences) and computer vision, focusing on understanding activities
from video.
To give some concrete examples: Humans can very quickly make accurate judgements about the
activity happening in a video even if the quality of the video is poor, or the motions
observed are ambiguous, for example, to discriminate hugging from fighting, or smoking
from eating finger food. Computers cannot match human performance in these tasks, which
are critical for applications in surveillance, monitoring safety and welfare in a care
setting, or removing inappropriate videos from social media. We do not yet fully
understand how humans perform these feats, nor how to make computer vision systems reach
their performance.
We invite human and computer vision science participants to present the latest advances in
their fields, in a language accessible to a multi-disciplinary audience. We intend to
foster a cross-fertilisation of ideas between the different scientific communities, where
each can see ways to incorporate insights and techniques from a foreign field in their
models. Moreover we intend to act as a "matchmaker" for new cross-disciplinary
partnerships on projects that can incorporate the techniques of separate communities. We
plan a future special issue of the journal Transactions in Cognitive and Developmental
Systems for the topic "Special issue on Vision Sciences for Video Understanding in
Cognitive Systems", where multi-disciplinary teams emerging from this workshop can
publish a paper in a presentation accessible to a multi-disciplinary audience.
We welcome participation from both junior and senior researchers from academia and
industry.
Potential topics include, but are not limited to:
Eye Tracking in Video,
Visual Attention and Salient Features in Video,
Cognitive Models for Video Understanding,
Perceptual Quality in Video Streaming,
Multimodal Perception in Videos,
Emotion and Affect in Video Viewing,
Neuroscience and Brain Imaging in Video Perception,
Visual Cognition in Virtual Reality (VR) and Augmented Reality (AR),
Attentional Shifts and Change Detection in Video,
Video Activity Recognition,
Video Object Detection and Tracking,
Video Segmentation and Scene Understanding,
Event Detection and Recognition in Videos,
Video-Based Surveillance and Security,
Spatiotemporal Action Localization,
Human Vision-Inspired Video Models
ORGANISERS
Dr Frank Guerin, University of Surrey
Dr Andrew Gilbert, University of Surrey
Dr Quoc Vuong, Newcastle University
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Biosciences Institute
Newcastle University
Newcastle upon Tyne, UK, NE2 4HH
+44 (0)191 208 6183
https://www.staff.ncl.ac.uk/q.c.vuong/
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