Discovery Early Career Researcher Award - Grant ID: DE210101297
Funder
Australian Research Council
Funding Amount
$429,000.00
Summary
A novel, dictionary-free, multi-contrast MRI method for microscopic imaging. This project aims to develop a novel quantitative imaging technique for comprehensive in vitro and in vivo tissue characterisation on the microscopic scale. The technology innovated in the project could revolutionise microscopic imaging techniques by breaking through the sub-millimetre image resolution bottleneck of current magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) methods. This project expects to generate new knowledge in the e ....A novel, dictionary-free, multi-contrast MRI method for microscopic imaging. This project aims to develop a novel quantitative imaging technique for comprehensive in vitro and in vivo tissue characterisation on the microscopic scale. The technology innovated in the project could revolutionise microscopic imaging techniques by breaking through the sub-millimetre image resolution bottleneck of current magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) methods. This project expects to generate new knowledge in the emerging field of biological imaging and to deliver an integrated imaging platform for mapping various tissue microscopic components at the cellular level. Successful outcomes have the potential for commercialisation and will accelerate a range of fundamental science and engineering studies requiring imaging techniques.Read moreRead less
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: DE150101655
Funder
Australian Research Council
Funding Amount
$297,036.00
Summary
Discriminative detection and quantification of cancer imaging biomarkers. This project aims to develop a new framework for the detection and quantification of cancer biomarkers in diagnostic and histopathology images with discriminative modelling of intrinsic structures. The framework will be the first computerised solution to provide automated, quantitative annotations of cancer imaging biomarkers at the macroscopic and microscopic levels to support standardised reporting of image interpretatio ....Discriminative detection and quantification of cancer imaging biomarkers. This project aims to develop a new framework for the detection and quantification of cancer biomarkers in diagnostic and histopathology images with discriminative modelling of intrinsic structures. The framework will be the first computerised solution to provide automated, quantitative annotations of cancer imaging biomarkers at the macroscopic and microscopic levels to support standardised reporting of image interpretation. It will help to alleviate the inter-observer variability and time-consuming process of manual analysis. The project aims to advance fundamental biomedical imaging research in generalised visual structure extraction and classification, and enable large-scale translational research in systems pathology for personalised cancer care.Read moreRead less
Discovery Early Career Researcher Award - Grant ID: DE160100568
Funder
Australian Research Council
Funding Amount
$360,000.00
Summary
Towards reliability in combinatorial optimisation. This project intends to develop techniques to ensure that the solutions reported by optimisation tools are correct and verifiable. Combinatorial optimisation problems, where the best solution must be found from a vast set of possibilities, are central to critical sectors of the economy, including shipping, transit, mining and emergency response. Automated tools for these problems can now solve large industrial examples, however, they are incredi ....Towards reliability in combinatorial optimisation. This project intends to develop techniques to ensure that the solutions reported by optimisation tools are correct and verifiable. Combinatorial optimisation problems, where the best solution must be found from a vast set of possibilities, are central to critical sectors of the economy, including shipping, transit, mining and emergency response. Automated tools for these problems can now solve large industrial examples, however, they are incredibly complex artefacts which are prone to error and difficult to test. New methods for ensuring the correctness of automated tools would allow users to trust that the results returned by these tools are correct when making critical decisions.Read moreRead less
Discovery Early Career Researcher Award - Grant ID: DE160101518
Funder
Australian Research Council
Funding Amount
$294,111.00
Summary
Multi-Object Recognition of Biomedical Images via Holistic Ontology. This project seeks to advance the development of new biomedical image recognition and analysis solutions by associating biomedical images with biomedical knowledge and personalised data. The provision of accurate and robust multi-object recognition and analysis from biomedical image data is a fundamental requirement for biomedical imaging applications. This project aims to improve the recognition and analysis of anatomical and ....Multi-Object Recognition of Biomedical Images via Holistic Ontology. This project seeks to advance the development of new biomedical image recognition and analysis solutions by associating biomedical images with biomedical knowledge and personalised data. The provision of accurate and robust multi-object recognition and analysis from biomedical image data is a fundamental requirement for biomedical imaging applications. This project aims to improve the recognition and analysis of anatomical and functional structures from biomedical images with ‘holistic ontology’ modelling that represents a multi-level biological, physiological, and anatomical knowledge base. The project will potentially have application in many health care areas, such as computer aided diagnosis, image-guided surgery planning, and image-based disease modelling.Read moreRead less
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
Discovery Early Career Researcher Award - Grant ID: DE190100539
Funder
Australian Research Council
Funding Amount
$408,000.00
Summary
Towards conversational vision-based Artificial Intelligence. This project aims to develop a novel learning framework, Vision-Ask-Answer-Act (V3A). This framework will allow a machine to perform a sequence of actions via a conversation with human users, based on intricate processing of not just visual input, but human-computer verbal exchanges. Artificial intelligence has great potential as a tool for economic productivity and daily tasks. Applications in cars and assistant robots, still in their ....Towards conversational vision-based Artificial Intelligence. This project aims to develop a novel learning framework, Vision-Ask-Answer-Act (V3A). This framework will allow a machine to perform a sequence of actions via a conversation with human users, based on intricate processing of not just visual input, but human-computer verbal exchanges. Artificial intelligence has great potential as a tool for economic productivity and daily tasks. Applications in cars and assistant robots, still in their early days, typically require significant expertise to use effectively. The outcomes of this project will push the boundary of vision-language research to produce a conversational intelligent agent that can be easily used in common situations across industry, transport, the medical sector, and at home.Read moreRead less
Discovery Early Career Researcher Award - Grant ID: DE130100292
Funder
Australian Research Council
Funding Amount
$285,000.00
Summary
Towards a stronger proof system for combinatorial optimisation. Combinatorial optimisation problems such as staff rostering, vehicle routing or resource allocation are central to the efficiency of many businesses and industries. This project will improve optimisation technology by using the low-level structure of the problems to find better solutions. This will save time, money and reduce environmental impact.
Discovery Early Career Researcher Award - Grant ID: DE120101778
Funder
Australian Research Council
Funding Amount
$375,000.00
Summary
Building change detection and map update using multispectral imagery and height data. This project will produce an effective building change detection procedure and a digital building map. Automatic building detection assists in taking possible precautions during natural disasters, whilst automatic building change detection facilitates an effective and efficient management of affected areas during and after the calamity.
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