Discovery Early Career Researcher Award - Grant ID: DE130100771
Funder
Australian Research Council
Funding Amount
$278,780.00
Summary
Automated system for bone texture analysis of osteoarthritis in hand radiographs. Early detection and prediction of hand osteoarthritis are not feasible by current methods of visual grading of hand radiographs. This project will develop a novel, fully automated system for selection of bone texture regions on hand radiographs and their analysis to address this problem.
Discovery Early Career Researcher Award - Grant ID: DE120102960
Funder
Australian Research Council
Funding Amount
$375,000.00
Summary
Revocable multi-dimensional shape-based multimodal hand biometrics for personal identification and verification. This project will investigate a new personal verification system based on hand biometrics. It will make significant improvements by thwarting identity frauds; creating trust in ebanking and epayments; providing social acceptance of biometrics; helping immigration and passport control; and reducing use of plastic cards to safeguard the environment.
Robust and scalable change detection in geo-spatial data. A flood of data in the form of text, images and video emanate from a proliferation of sensors. These data are collected but rarely analysed, rendering it meaningless. This project aims to develop new software and techniques to detect changes over time in large scale geographically referenced data (for example photomaps) for use across numerous domains.
Hybrid optimisation for automatic large-scale video annotation. Optimization is the basis for solving many problems in Computer Vision, such as three-dimensional geometry recovery, image segmentation, scene labeling and object recognition. This project will develop new optimisation techniques and demonstrate their suitability for large-scale video annotation, which is key to visual data mining and scene understanding.
Discovery Early Career Researcher Award - Grant ID: DE140100180
Funder
Australian Research Council
Funding Amount
$394,305.00
Summary
Advancing Dense 3D Reconstruction of Non-rigid Scenes by Using a Moving Camera. This project will advance the fundamental research in geometric computer vision and develop a new framework for efficient dense three-dimensional reconstruction of non-rigid scenes by using a moving camera. It is expected that this project will bring about breakthroughs in geometric computer vision with many daily applications, including three-dimensional natural human-computer interaction, three-dimensional reconstr ....Advancing Dense 3D Reconstruction of Non-rigid Scenes by Using a Moving Camera. This project will advance the fundamental research in geometric computer vision and develop a new framework for efficient dense three-dimensional reconstruction of non-rigid scenes by using a moving camera. It is expected that this project will bring about breakthroughs in geometric computer vision with many daily applications, including three-dimensional natural human-computer interaction, three-dimensional reconstruction from historical movies and three-dimensional realistic animations. Its outcomes will enable users to capture and manipulate their surrounding dynamic world in three-dimensions easily and conveniently. This project will alleviate many of the major difficulties (dense correspondences, long sequences, complex deformations) with conventional non-rigid reconstruction methods.Read moreRead less
Leveraging 3D computer vision for camera-based precise geo-localisation. This project aims to develop advanced 3D computer vision and image processing technology that can turn regular cameras into high-precision location-sensing devices. Spatial Location is a fundamental type of information of our physical world. Determining the precise location of people, vehicle, and mobile devices is essential for many critical applications. Outcomes of the project will enable a wide range of novel applicatio ....Leveraging 3D computer vision for camera-based precise geo-localisation. This project aims to develop advanced 3D computer vision and image processing technology that can turn regular cameras into high-precision location-sensing devices. Spatial Location is a fundamental type of information of our physical world. Determining the precise location of people, vehicle, and mobile devices is essential for many critical applications. Outcomes of the project will enable a wide range of novel applications of significant social, environmental and economic value, such as Location-Aware Service, Environment Monitoring, Augmented Reality, Autonomous Vehicle, and Rapid Emergency Response. The project will enhance Australia's international competitive advantage in forefront of ICT research and technology innovation.Read moreRead less
Discovery Early Career Researcher Award - Grant ID: DE220101379
Funder
Australian Research Council
Funding Amount
$417,000.00
Summary
Towards Transferable Visual Understanding in the Real World. This project aims to investigate how to improve the transferability of visual understanding algorithm and system in the real-world applications. This project expects to innovate and advance knowledge in the fields of visual transfer learning and generalizable visual representation learning. Expected outcomes of this project include techniques and algorithms to make the visual understanding system robust to diverse real-world scenarios. ....Towards Transferable Visual Understanding in the Real World. This project aims to investigate how to improve the transferability of visual understanding algorithm and system in the real-world applications. This project expects to innovate and advance knowledge in the fields of visual transfer learning and generalizable visual representation learning. Expected outcomes of this project include techniques and algorithms to make the visual understanding system robust to diverse real-world scenarios. This project should provide significant benefits, such as improving the robustness and safety of autonomous vehicles in transportation area, and reducing the cost of destructive data collection for intelligent fault detection in advanced manufacturing area.Read moreRead less
Design of adaptive learning visual sensor networks for crowd modelling in high-density and occluded scenarios. Partnering University of Melbourne researchers, with video surveillance experts SenSen, engineering consultants ARUP and the Melbourne Cricket Club, the project addresses research enabling a system-integrating, existing surveillance, infrastructure to model crowd behaviour and exit strategies, providing real-time analysis, prediction and response capabilities for venue managers and emer ....Design of adaptive learning visual sensor networks for crowd modelling in high-density and occluded scenarios. Partnering University of Melbourne researchers, with video surveillance experts SenSen, engineering consultants ARUP and the Melbourne Cricket Club, the project addresses research enabling a system-integrating, existing surveillance, infrastructure to model crowd behaviour and exit strategies, providing real-time analysis, prediction and response capabilities for venue managers and emergency services. This new capability enhances utilisation of security resources to prevent injury and fatalities in evacuation scenarios, applicable to existing venues and influencing the development of new facilities around the country. The project delivers researcher training, global clientele for local technology and a platform for local industry growth.Read moreRead less