Bernt Schiele
Professor
-
Research Interests:
-
-
Since April 2004 I am full professor at the computer science
department of Darmstadt University of Technology (TU Darmstadt), where
I have founded the Multimodal Interactive Systems Group. Before coming
to Darmstadt I have been assistant professor at the computer science
department of ETH Zurich (Swiss Federal Institute of Technology), where
I headed the Perceptual Computing and Computer Vision Group.
Perceptual computing is concerned with the processing of sensor data
such as audio, video, and other sensory data. The growing interest and
the increase in the amount of sensor data calls for efficient
techniques to index, search, and structure those data. In the future,
the number of sensors may increase substantially since many types of
sensors become very cheap such that computing has access to and can be
enhanced by ubiquitous sensors. Ubiquitous sensors and sensing have
the potential to fundamentally the way we think about human-computer
interaction and how machines perceive the world. For example wearable
sensors can perceive the human and the environment of the human from a
first-person perspective. Or sensors attached to objects can perceive
events and actions performed with those objects. I call this area of
research sensory augmented computing.
The research areas of my group are computer vision, multi-sensor
perceptual computing (combining information from
many sensor modalities), and - more recently - multi-modal interactive systems. Application areas of our research include
ubiquitous and wearable computing, human-computer interfaces, indexing
multi-sensory databases. See our project page for
details about current research projects at TU Darmstadt and ETH Zurich.
Short Bio:
Bernt Schiele is Full Professor of Computer Science at Darmsadt University of Technology
since April 2004.
He studied computer science at the University of Karlsruhe, Germany. He
worked on his master thesis in the field of robotics in Grenoble,
France, where he also obtained the "diplome d'etudes approfondies
d'informatique". In 1994 he worked in the field of multi-modal
human-computer interfaces at Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh,
PA, USA in the group of Alex Waibel. In 1997 he obtained his PhD from
INP Grenoble, France under the supervision of Prof. James L. Crowley in
the field of computer vision. The title of his thesis was "Object
Recognition using Multidimensional Receptive Field Histograms". Between
1997 and 2000 he was postdoctoral associate and Visiting Assistant
Professor with the group of Prof. Alex Pentland at the Media Laboratory
of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA, USA. From
1999 until 2004 he was Assistant Professor at the Swiss Federal
Institute of Technoly in Zurich (ETH Zurich).
His main research interests are in computer vision, perceptual
computing, robotics, statistical learning methods, wearable computers,
and integration of multi-modal sensor data. He is particularly
interested in developing methods which work under real-world
conditions.
-
Education
-
PhD: Docteur de l'Institut Polytechnique de
Grenoble, France, 1997
MSc's: Diplom-Informatiker, University of Karlsruhe,
Germany, 1994,
and DEA de l'informatique de l'ENSIMAG, France, 1993
-
Experience
-
Assistant Professor
ETH Zurich, Switzerland, 1999-2004
Postdoctoral Associate and Visiting Assistant Professor
MIT (Massachussets Institute of Technology), Cambridge, MA, USA, 1997-2000
Visiting researcher at
CMU (Carnegie Mellon University), Pittsburgh, PA, USA, 1994
Teaching: See our teaching
webpage
Some External Activities:
-
ECCV 2004, European Conference on Computer Vision, May, 2004
-
Pervasive 2004, Internation Conference on Pervasive Computing, April, 2004
-
ICPR 2004, International Conference
on Pattern Recognition, 2004
-
ICCV 2003, IEEE International
Conference on Computer Vision, Oct 14-17, 2003
-
UbiComp 2003,
International Conference on Ubiquitous Computing, Oct 12-15,
2003
-
Pervasive
2002, International Conference on Pervasive Computing, August 26-28,
2002
-
ICPR 2002, International Conference
on Pattern Recognition, August 11-15, 2002
-
ECCV 2002, European Conference on
Computer Vision, May 28-31, 2002
-
ISWC
2001, IEEE International Symposium on Wearable Computing, October
8&9, 2001
-
ICCV 2001, IEEE International
Conference on Computer Vision, July 9-12, 2001
-
ICVS 2001, IEEE International Worshop
on Computer Vision Systems, July 7&8, 2001
|