This talk presents research spanning the fields of artificial life,
computer graphics, and computer vision. We have created physics-based
virtual worlds inhabited by realistic ``artificial animals''. These
sophisticated artificial life models possess muscle-actuated bodies,
eyes, and brains with motor, perception, and behavior centers.
Artificial animals are of interest in computer graphics in part
because they are self-animating creatures that dramatically advance
the state of the art of graphical character animation. As zoomimetic
autonomous agents situated in realistic virtual worlds, artificial
animals also foster a deeper understanding of biological information
processing. In particular, they enable an advantageously fresh
paradigm for computer vision research. Artificial animals are able to
navigate complex, highly dynamic 3D environments using active vision
systems that continuously analyze retinal streams imaged through
mobile, foveated eyes. Artificial animals are furthermore valuable to
the study of learning and cognition in living systems. They can learn
muscle-actuated locomotion and are able to acquire some astonishing
motor skills guided by sensory perception. Finally, knowledge
representation formalisms from AI now support basic cognition in
artificial animals. The talk will be richly illustrated with CG
images and video.
BIO:
Demetri Terzopoulos (PhD '84 MIT) is Professor of Computer Science and
Electrical & Computer Engineering at the University of Toronto, where
he leads the Visual Modeling Group and is a Canada Council Killam
Fellow. He also leads the Computer Graphics Animation research group
at Intel Corporation in Santa Clara, CA. Prior to joining the
University of Toronto in 1989, he was a program leader at Schlumberger
corporate research centers in California and Texas. His published
works include more than 200 scientific articles and several volumes,
primarily in computer vision and graphics, and also in medical
imaging, computer-aided design, artificial intelligence, and
artificial life. Professor Terzopoulos' contributions have been
recognized with awards from the IEEE, the American Association for
Artificial Intelligence, the International Digital Media Foundation,
Ars Electronica, NICOGRAPH (Japan), and the Canadian Image Processing
and Pattern Recognition Society. He has received three of Canada's
most prestigious research fellowships and five University of Toronto
Excellence Awards. He has served on DARPA, NIH, and NSF advisory
committees and was program co-chair of the 1998 IEEE Conference on
Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition (CVPR'98).
Date and Time
Wednesday October 14, 1998 4:00pm -
5:30pm
Location
Computer Science Small Auditorium (Room 105)
Speaker
Demetri Terzopoulos, from University of Toronto