Announcements  
 
About 6373

COSC 6373: Computer Vision

Fall 2002 (Section 08796)
5:30pm - 7:00pm, Monday & Wednesday
Room L 58
URL: http://www.vcl.uh.edu/~6373f02/index.html

Instructor: Ioannis Kakadiaris (ioannisk@uh.edu)
Office Hours (PGH 219): 7:00pm - 7:30pm Mon & Wed

Goals:

    This course offers an introduction to computer vision and machine perception.  Computer vision describes the automatic deduction of the properties and the structure of a three-dimensional world from one or more monochromatic (or colored) two-dimensional images. The robotic control of an unmanned lunar rover, the automatic classification of blood cells in medical images and the detection of faults in seismic data are examples of computer vision applications.  This course is intended to provide material of interest to students in science and engineering at the graduate level, with examples drawn from all the major industries of the Houston area (e.g. NASA, Medical Center, Oil industry).

Topics to be covered:

  •  What is Computer Vision?
  •  Image Formation & Representation
  •  Image Pre-Processing
  •  Edge/Line Detection
  •  Image Segmentation
  •  Shape Representation
  •  Image Data Compression
  •  Motion Analysis

Prerequisites

    Programming in C or C++, Linear Algebra and  Calculus.

Evaluation

    The course grade will be computed as follows:

    Assignments 50%
    Midterm 15%
    Final  25%
    Class Participation 10%

Textbooks

  • Milan Sonka, Vaclav Hlavac, Roger Boyle: Image Processing, Analysis, and Machine Vision, Brooks/Cole Publishing Company, 1998, Second Edition
  • David Forsyth, Jean Ponce: Computer Vision - A Modern Approach, Prentice Hall, 2003

 

Back to top