turnerdevaughn
TDN_Neven_Vision.JPG
Dr. Hartmut Neven presented at SC07. He offered a series of demonstrations of the technology now owned by Google. He co-founded Neven Vision Inc., and sold it to Google in August, 2006.
His biography on the Biometric Consortium 2005 Conference web site reads as follows:
"He is the leader of the Laboratory for Human-Machine Interfaces at the University of Southern California's Information Sciences Institute. Prior to forming Neven Vision, Dr. Neven was the Chief Technology Officer of Eyematic Inc. a science-driven company that emerged as technology and concept leader in human-machine interfaces and visual communications. Based on research conducted under Dr. Neven’s tutelage, Eyematic developed a significant number of patented processes.
"Dr. Neven was Assistant Professor of Computer Science at the University of Southern California where he led the Laboratory for Biological and Computational Vision, focusing on vision-based human-machine interfaces. Under his guidance the USC team won the DARPA sponsored 1997 FERET test on face recognition systems. His Eyematic team again achieved excellent scores in the Face Recognition Vendor Test 2002. He was also a principal investigator for the National Tele-Immersion Initiative led by cyber-pioneer Jaron Lanier who is widely recognized for coining the term "virtual reality".
"Hartmut Neven is a member of IEEE as well as the program committee of the Digital Life Consortium at the MIT Media Lab. During his graduate studies Dr. Neven was a fellow at the Studienstiftung des Deutschen Volkes which offers scholarships for the top 0.5% of German academics. His Master of Science thesis on a neuronal model of object recognition was written at the Max Planck Institute for Biological Cybernetics.
"In 1996 he received his Ph.D. summa cum laude from the Institute for Neuroinformatics at the Ruhr Universitat in Bochum, Germany, for a thesis on "Dynamics for vision-guided autonomous mobile robots" written under the tutelage of Prof. Dr. Christoph von der Malsburg. He also studied Physics and Economics in Koln, Paris, Tubingen, Aachen, Jerusalem and Brazil."
See:
www.biometrics.org/bc2005/Bios/Neven Bio_Special.pdf
TDN_Neven_Vision.JPG
Dr. Hartmut Neven presented at SC07. He offered a series of demonstrations of the technology now owned by Google. He co-founded Neven Vision Inc., and sold it to Google in August, 2006.
His biography on the Biometric Consortium 2005 Conference web site reads as follows:
"He is the leader of the Laboratory for Human-Machine Interfaces at the University of Southern California's Information Sciences Institute. Prior to forming Neven Vision, Dr. Neven was the Chief Technology Officer of Eyematic Inc. a science-driven company that emerged as technology and concept leader in human-machine interfaces and visual communications. Based on research conducted under Dr. Neven’s tutelage, Eyematic developed a significant number of patented processes.
"Dr. Neven was Assistant Professor of Computer Science at the University of Southern California where he led the Laboratory for Biological and Computational Vision, focusing on vision-based human-machine interfaces. Under his guidance the USC team won the DARPA sponsored 1997 FERET test on face recognition systems. His Eyematic team again achieved excellent scores in the Face Recognition Vendor Test 2002. He was also a principal investigator for the National Tele-Immersion Initiative led by cyber-pioneer Jaron Lanier who is widely recognized for coining the term "virtual reality".
"Hartmut Neven is a member of IEEE as well as the program committee of the Digital Life Consortium at the MIT Media Lab. During his graduate studies Dr. Neven was a fellow at the Studienstiftung des Deutschen Volkes which offers scholarships for the top 0.5% of German academics. His Master of Science thesis on a neuronal model of object recognition was written at the Max Planck Institute for Biological Cybernetics.
"In 1996 he received his Ph.D. summa cum laude from the Institute for Neuroinformatics at the Ruhr Universitat in Bochum, Germany, for a thesis on "Dynamics for vision-guided autonomous mobile robots" written under the tutelage of Prof. Dr. Christoph von der Malsburg. He also studied Physics and Economics in Koln, Paris, Tubingen, Aachen, Jerusalem and Brazil."
See:
www.biometrics.org/bc2005/Bios/Neven Bio_Special.pdf