Synthesis Lectures on Image, Video, and Multimedia Processing

Editor

Alan C. Bovik, University of Texas, Austin

The Lectures on Image, Video and Multimedia Processing are intended to provide a unique and groundbreaking forum for the world’s experts in the field to express their knowledge in unique and effective ways. It is our intention that the Series will contain Lectures of basic, intermediate, and advanced material depending on the topical matter and the authors’ level of discourse. It is also intended that these Lectures depart from the usual dry textbook format and instead give the author the opportunity to speak more directly to the reader, and to unfold the subject matter from a more personal point of view. The success of this candid approach to technical writing will rest on our selection of exceptionally distinguished authors, who have been chosen for their noteworthy leadership in developing new ideas in image, video, and multimedia processing research, development, and education.

In terms of the subject matter for the series, there are few limitations that we will impose other than the Lectures be related to aspects of the imaging sciences that are relevant to furthering our understanding of the processes by which images, videos, and multimedia signals are formed, processed for various tasks, and perceived by human viewers. These categories are naturally quite broad, for two reasons: First, measuring, processing, and understanding perceptual signals involves broad categories of scientific inquiry, including optics, surface physics, visual psychophysics and neurophysiology, information theory, computer graphics, display and printing technology, artificial intelligence, neural networks, harmonic analysis, and so on. Secondly, the domain of application of these methods is limited only by the number of branches of science, engineering, and industry that utilize audio, visual, and other perceptual signals to convey information. We anticipate that the Lectures in this series will dramatically influence future thought on these subjects as the Twenty-First Century unfolds.

Remote Sensing Image Processing

Gustavo Camps-Valls, Devis Tuia, Luis Gómez-Chova, Sandra Jiménez, and Jesús Malo 2011

The Structure and Properties of Color Spaces and the Representation of Color Images

Eric Dubois

2009

Biomedical Image Analysis: Segmentation

Scott T. Acton and Nilanjan Ray

2009

Joint Source-Channel Video Transmission

Fan Zhai and Aggelos Katsaggelos

2007

Super Resolution of Images and Video

Aggelos K. Katsaggelos, Rafael Molina, and Javier Mateos

2007

Tensor Voting: A Perceptual Organization Approach to Computer Vision and Machine Learning

Philippos Mordohai and Gérard Medioni

2006

Light Field Sampling

Cha Zhang and Tsuhan Chen

2006

Real-Time Image and Video Processing: From Research to Reality

Nasser Kehtarnavaz and Mark Gamadia

2006

MPEG-4 Beyond Conventional Video Coding: Object Coding, Resilience, and Scalability

Mihaela van der Schaar, Deepak S Turaga, and Thomas Stockhammer

2006

Modern Image Quality Assessment

Zhou Wang and Alan C. Bovik

2006

Biomedical Image Analysis: Tracking

Scott T. Acton and Nilanjan Ray

2006

Recognition of Humans and Their Activities Using Video

Rama Chellappa, Amit K. Roy-Chowdhury, and S. Kevin Zhou

2005

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