People

Permanent Co-organizers

 

Dr. Xavier Alameda-Pineda is a Research Scientist at Inria Grenoble. He received his PhD in mathematics and Computer Science from Université Joseph Fourier in 2013. His main research interests are machine learning for computer vision and multi-modal fusion with applications to robotics and human behavior understanding. He is the recipient of four paper awards, including IAPR ICPR 2016 and ACM Multimedia 2015. He co-organized a special session at ICMR 2017 and a workshop at ACM Multimedia 2017, on the multi-modal analysis of subjective properties of data. He was Area Chair at ICCV 2017 and Outstanding Reviewer of CVPR 2017.

Dr. Miriam Redi  is a Research Scientist in the Research and Data team at the Wikimedia Foundation. Her research focuses on content-based social multimedia understanding and culture analytics. In particular, she explores ways to automatically assess visual aesthetics, sentiment and creativity, and responsibly exploit the power of computer vision in the context of web, social media, and online communities. She is the recipient of 2 paper awards, including ICWSM 2015 and ACM ICMR 2016.  She co-organized a special session at ICMR 2017 and a workshop at ACM Multimedia 2017, on the multi-modal analysis of subjective properties of data. Miriam got her Ph.D. at the Multimedia group in EURECOM, Sophia Antipolis. After obtaining her PhD, she was a Research Scientist at Yahoo Labs and at Bell Labs in Cambridge, UK.

Prof. Nicu Sebe is Full Professor with the University of Trento, Italy, leading the research in the areas of multimedia information retrieval and human behavior understanding. He was the General Co- Chair of the IEEE FG Conference 2008 and ACM Multimedia 2013, and the Program Chair of the International Conference on Image and Video Retrieval in 2007 and 2010, ACM Multimedia 2007 and 2011. He is/was the Program Chair of ICCV 2017, ECCV 2016 and ICPR 2020, and a General Chair of ACM ICMR 2017. He is a fellow of the International Association for Pattern Recognition.

Prof. Shih-Fu Chang is the Sr. Executive Vice Dean and the Richard Dicker Professor of Columbia Engineering. His research is focused on multimedia information retrieval, computer vision, machine learning, and signal processing, with the goal to turn unstructured multimedia data into searchable information. For his long-term pioneering contributions, he has been awarded the IEEE Signal Processing Society Technical Achievement Award, ACM Multimedia SIG Technical Achievement Award, Honorary Doctorate from the University of Amsterdam, the IEEE Kiyo Tomiyasu Award, and IBM Faculty Award. He is a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) and IEEE.


Single Edition Co-organizers

 

Dr. Diane Larlus is a senior research scientist in the Computer Vision group of Naver Labs Europe. Her research focuses on applying machine learning to several computer vision tasks. She is particularly interested in getting a semantic and global understanding of visual scenes. She has recently worked on instance-level and semantic visual search and in representing the structure and geometry of object categories, and in reasoning at the scene-level with images and text. Diane was an Outstanding Reviewer at ECCV 2016, CVPR 2017 and 2018.

Prof. Kristen Grauman is a Professor in the Department of Computer Science at the University of Texas at Austin and Research Scientist with Facebook AI Research (FAIR). She received her Ph.D. from MIT in the Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory in 2006. Her research interests are in computer vision and machine learning. She is a Sloan Fellow and recipient of the IJCAI Computers and Thought Award, PAMI Young Researcher Award, Presidential Early Career Award for Scientists and Engineers (PECASE), the 2018 IAPR J. K. Aggarwal Prize, a 2017 Helmholtz test of time award, and best paper awards at CVPR 2008, ICCV 2011, and ACCV 2016. She serves as Associate Editor-in-Chief for PAMI. She is/was a Program Chair for CVPR 2015 and NIPS 2018.

Prof. Jiebo Luo  is Full Professor in the Computer Science Department at the University of Rochester. Prior to that, he was a Senior Principal Scientist with the Kodak Research Laboratories. He received a BS degree and an MS degree in Electrical Engineering from the University of Science and Technology of China in 1989 and 1992, respectively, and a PhD degree in Electrical Engineering from the University of Rochester in 1995. Dr. Luo has been actively involved in numerous technical conferences, including serving as general chair of 2018 ACM Multimedia, program chair of 2010 ACM Multimedia, 2012 IEEE CVPR, 2016 ACM ICMR and 2017 IEEE ICIP. He has served on the editorial boards of the IEEE TPAMI, IEEE TMM, IEEE TCSVT. Dr. Luo is Fellow of the SPIE, IAPR and IEEE.

Prof. Adriana Kovashka is an Assistant Professor in Computer Science at the University of Pittsburgh. She received her PhD in 2014 from The University of Texas at Austin, and her B.A. in Computer Science and Media Studies from Pomona College in 2008. Her research interests primarily lie in computer vision, with some overlap in machine learning, information retrieval, natural language processing, and human computation. Her research is funded by two NSF grants and a Google Faculty Research Award. Her research has been published in the top computer vision and natural language processing conferences (CVPR, ICCV, ACL). Adriana has previously organized two workshops, Human-Machine Communication for Visual Recognition and Search (ECCV 2014) and Women in Computer Vision (CVPR 2015). Adriana was also the chair/co-chair of the CVPR Doctoral Consortium (2015-2017).

Prof. Devi Parikh is an Assistant Professor at Georgia Tech and a Research Scientist at Facebook AI Research. Her research interests include computer vision and AI in general and visual recognition problems in particular. Her recent work involves exploring problems at the intersection of vision and language, and leveraging human-machine collaboration for building smarter machines. Devi has led the organization of three workshops (at CVPR 2010, 2016, and 2017), co-organized two workshops (at ECCV 2014), and led the organization of a tutorial (at ICCV 2013).

Dr. Mohammad Soleymani is a Swiss NSF Ambizione fellow at the Swiss Center for Affective Sciences and CVML laboratory. His research interests are in emotion recognition and emotional analysis of multimedia, including emotion recognition tools based on cognitive appraisal theory and emotional analysis in music. I am a member of MediaEval community council, of the Executive Committee for the AAAC, of ACM SIGMM and of the IEEE.

Prof. Samuel D. Gosling  is Professor of Psychology at the University of Texas. He has three main areas of interest: Connections between people and the physical spaces in which they live, personality in nonhuman animals, and new methods for obtaining data useful for research in the social sciences.

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