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News Releases - July 23, 2008 Schneiderman and Kanade Win Longuet-Higgins Prize for Seminal Paper on Face Detection Technology
Their paper titled “Probabilistic Modeling of Local Appearance and Spatial Relationships for Object Recognition,” written a decade ago, was cited as “a significant advance in object recognition through probabilistic modeling and multiple-view training, yielding a state-of-the-art face detection technique.” Schneiderman and Kanade each received a certificate and will share the $2,000 prize. Schneiderman, who received his doctoral degree in robotics in 2000, served as full-time research faculty from 2000 – 2004, and is currently adjunct faculty while serving as CEO of Pittsburgh Pattern Recognition, a local company he co-founded in 2004, that is developing state-of-the art technologies for finding, tracking and recognizing faces and other objects in images and video. Kanade, whose many honors include the Franklin Institute's $250,000 2008 Bower Prize, Japan's Okawa Prize and the C&C Award, served 10 years as director of the Robotics Institute. He currently directs the National Science Foundation's Quality of Life Technology Engineering Research Center, which was established in 2006. In addition, he is the founding director of the Digital Human Research Center in Tokyo, which aims to measure and model human functions for use in designing human-centered systems. Contact: See the Archive for more News Releases. |